Almost all modern first-world powers have healthcare owned by the government with the USA being the only example of a country without it. Some of these countries include: France, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and almost all western european countries excluding England.
None. Socialism will be a global system with no borders and no government. Also no money or classes, just people co-operating for the common good.
Some examples of democratic socialist countries include Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland. These countries have mixed economies with high levels of social welfare programs, progressive taxation, and active government involvement in areas such as healthcare, education, and social services.
The United States is typically seen as a capitalist country, but it is also socialist as the programs the government provides are a product of our tax money. Other capitalist countries include Brazil, Japan, Sudan, Sweden, and Columbia.
Countries with free market capitalism and some socialist wealth redistribution. Examples include the 3rd reich, fascist italy, and most of the modern world.
An example of a socialist economy is one in which the government has control over products being produced. China is one example of a socialist economy. Some other examples are Finland, Canada, Sweden, Norway, and the Netherlands.
Prairie and Forest
The benefits of establishing a socialist government (an economic system, not a political one) are it creates community values; raises the standard of living for everyone if it is done correctly; raise the level of education and health services; and need, not profit would drive production. These are just a few examples of the benefits as there are many more too.
Examples: China, Vietnam, North Korea, Cuba.
Socialist Labor Party Communist Party U.S.A. Democratic Socialists of America Socialist Workers' Party
Examples of Annex include communications, warning, mass care, and resource management.
In a democratic government, the people participate equally instead of power being concentrated in a minority, such as in monarchy and oligarchy. Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Denmark, New Zealand, Australia and Switzerland are examples of countries with democratic governments.
Czarist Russia France under Marie Antoinette: Madam, the people have no bread to eat. Marie Antoinette: Well, then let them eat cake! Form: Aristocracies are run by individuals who will declare themselves aristocrats. Function: Countries with a concentration of power with individuals who control commerce and occupy positions in the government, allowing a minimum of personal freedoms. Socialist countries and countries with dictatorial powers assumed by those in its government are called by other names. In function, they resemble aristocracies. Communist USSR differed from Czarist Russia insofar as it: -Was larger via aggressive expansion -Called its aristocrats 'Politburo Members' -Claimed that their opulent standard of living was necessary to insure equality for all in the citzenry (proletariat) -Many of the adherents of Socialist Germany in the 1940s traveled to the US after the war. They assumed positions of influence in the elite US universities and in roles of journalism and the authorship of books, mostly on social science subjects. Psychology, philosophy, religion, and economics came to be dominated by these German socialist contingencies. Wilhelm Reich, Erich Fromm, Rudolph Bultmann are examples. (Nazi is derived from the phrase 'National-Sozialistische Arbeits-Partei', a labor movement claiming that it sought greater equality for the poor and workers.)
Economy in which much of the activity is controlled by government policy rather than by the dictates of markets. Examples are socialist and communist economies.