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by matsemann 2633 days ago
Farouk al-Kasim. It's a fascinating story, glad I found this in webarchive as it's now behind a paywall.

http://web.archive.org/web/20100123225932/http://www.ft.com/...

2 comments

I really enjoyed the story... but find myself wondering what was the specific “magic” that made it work.

Nowadays everything is “setup” for the cooperation of public and private, but what are the key “ingredients” to make it happen?

The fact that this worked out, is it something unique to that situation, or cannot be duplicated?

The part I find most enticing is this idea of the government shouldering 50% of the risk, and industry only having to do 15%. If anyone could expand on this, I would appreciate it.

> Nowadays everything is “setup” for the cooperation of public and private, but what are the key “ingredients” to make it happen?

Norweigans trust their government, corruption is low, there's strong institutions already in place (a point specifically mentioned by al-Kasim in the Planet Money podcast) to ensure a competent and transparent execution of the plan. There's not many places in the world where all those factors exist sadly.

Thank you, this is fascinating!
Holy moly, what a story. I remember reading it a few years ago, and what a crazy example of butterfly effect. The one Norwegian girl who decided she wanted to be an au-pair in London, and met an Iraqi boy there, changed the whole country.