Europe | The fraud that wasn’t

A benefits scandal sinks the Dutch government

But the prime minister will doubtless return

|AMSTERDAM

EVERY COUNTRY’S welfare state is a reflection of its soul. Take the Netherlands, an egalitarian country but also a deeply Calvinist and bureaucratic one. Dutch benefits are generous. Income inequality is among the lowest in the EU. But benefits are subject to complicated rules meant to exclude the undeserving. These can run amok. Over the past decade, systems meant to snoop out abuse of child-care benefits wrongly labelled more than 20,000 parents as fraudsters and drove many into penury. On January 15th Mark Rutte, the prime minister, and his cabinet resigned over the scandal. It may herald a modest shift to the left in Dutch social policy.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The fraud that wasn’t”

Morning after in America

From the January 23rd 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

Friedrich Merz

Germans are growing cold on the debt brake

Expect changes after the election

Pope Francis in Rome, Italy

The Pope and Italy’s prime minister tussle over Donald Trump

Giorgia Meloni was the only European leader at the inauguration


A knight on a horse facing the barel of a gun with electronic pattern on it.

Europe faces a new age of gunboat digital diplomacy

Can the EU regulate Donald Trump’s big tech bros?


Ukrainian scientists are studying downed Russian missiles

And learning a lot about sanctions-busting

Russian pilots appear to be hunting Ukrainian civilians

Residents of Kherson are dodging murderous drones