Contestants compete during the 2012 LG U.S. National Texting Championship Mary Altaffer/AP April 15 is quickly approaching. Tax day. The procrastinator's worst nightmare.

But while Americans may scramble to organize their paperwork, northern Europeans are playing it cool.

That's because in Nordic countries, doing your taxes can be as simple as sending a text message.

"In Sweden, the vast majority of taxpayers don't do battle with tax documents and fine-print questions about itemized deductions," Derek Thompson writes in The Atlantic. "They just get a document from the government with all the relevant information already filled out. Some even get a text message with their prepared tax information, and if they respond 'yes,' their taxes are done."

The way taxes work in Nordic nations — a group that includes Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway, and, randomly, Estonia — is different from how it works here.

In the US, taxes are prepared privately by the people who pay them (or by those people's accountants). In Nordic countries, they're prepared by the government.

As a result, people in Nordic countries don't have to do much of anything to file their taxes. They just need to agree the government has prepared the forms correctly. For the people who don't have specialized income to declare, this is painless enough that they can confirm via text.

Researchers have lobbied for a similarly simple set of tax codes in the US, but as Thompson explains, the incentive to keep things how they are is simply too great. A number of companies, including those that make tax software (Turbo Tax, H&R Block), profit on people's inability to do their taxes by hand.

Like America's notoriously convoluted health-insurance system, tax codes are practically designed to be incomprehensible. But even without the backlash from tax-software companies, bringing the Nordic model stateside wouldn't be an easy transition.

One of the reasons it works so well up north is that most people are middle class; their taxes don't come with a laundry list of obscure tax breaks and loopholes that enable huge companies to pay nothing in taxes.

As a result, the people in the US who have the most to lose from a Nordic set of tax codes are the ones in the highest tax brackets. Those are the ones able to game the system. Even further up are the ones who're actually capable of making any real changes to the tax codes, so it's unlikely they'd act against their own interest.

In the choice between dismantling a highly lucrative industry that needs people to be confused for it to work and making millions of people a little less stressed each spring, the winning option is clear.

The Nordic model will continue to stand alone.