We need to look to Scandinavian models for a more economically and socially communalistic Britain that can feel more at ease with itself.
There was the "We'll support you, but please be invisible until you are us" Scandinavian model.
Based on a Scandinavian model, the communities strive for diversity of ages and income; members frequently share meals and other social activities.
Doesn't sound much like the successful Scandinavian model where state schools are staffed by 7 year trained masters degree teachers.
The British 'compromise' is in practice closer to the American than Scandinavian model.
In 1977 she started the Craft Skellar, an off-campus community weaving center founded on the Scandinavian model.
In some cases, there is no saving at all, as with the Scandinavian models, which have features that are not available in this country.
If carefully designed, such intervention can follow the "gentle" Scandinavian model that many Eastern Europeans envy.
On the second question: is the internal market compatible with the Scandinavian social model?
We think that this traditional Scandinavian model involving collective agreements ought to be retained.