Yes, sort of. Our healthcare system is regional, not national and is spread out into four districts. Anyone under 16 gets free care, but adults (over 16 in Norway) pay a deductible each year for an exemption card with allows the person free healthcare for the year and must be renewed annually.
Norway's healthcare system is ranked 13th internationally, 3rd in Europe, but is known for its long waiting periods, so unless your care is urgent, take a seat and wait your turn.
Rich country, high prices. It happens. Our per capital income is nearly 21,000 USD higher then is Sweden's. Add taxes and social services into the mix, and prices are damn expensive, but our wages match. I make roughly 300,000 USD as a control engineer, so I can't say expensive pizza is really much of a bother to me.
Oh but don't worry, we're a friendly people who like to help the poor
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Yup, it's costly. Most of Norway's oil is exported and the money invested in renewable energy, not used domestically. Our government treats social services like a social experiment too, often using tax revenue to benefit the country - its people, environment, business and so on. It disincentivizes fossil fuel powered transit and promotes electric or hybrid propulsion by making oil so expensive by slapping massive taxes on it.
I can't really complain about petrol prices though, since I drive this
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Our Navy and Coast Guard run almost exclusively on natural gas now, but have dual gas-oil propulsion systems. The government's taken a lot of steps to limit petrol use and promote cleaner forms of energy.