What's Gone Wrong with Sweden's Economy?

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
  • Sign up to Brilliant (the first 200 sign ups get 20% off an annual premium subscription): brilliant.org/tldreu
    Sweden's NATO accession is dominating international headlines, but domestically the country is facing major economic and social problems. So in this video, we'll break down the issues they face and whether Kristersson's government can turn it around.
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    //////////////////////
    1 - www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    2 - www.visualcapitalist.com/worl...
    3 - tradingeconomics.com/sweden/g...
    4 - www.government.se/press-relea...
    5 - www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    6 - www.riksbank.se/en-gb/statist...
    7 - www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
    8 - www.statista.com/statistics/5...
    9 - www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator...
    10 - setterwalls.se/en/article/the...
    11 - www.gisreportsonline.com/r/sw...
    12 - www.ft.com/content/b7651979-1...
    13 - www.theguardian.com/world/202...
    14 - pro.morningconsult.com/tracke...
    15 - www.politico.eu/europe-poll-o...
    00:00 Introduction
    01:42 Context
    02:55 Sweden’s Economy
    05:22 Sweden’s Social Issues
    06:55 What Happens Next?
    07:48 Brilliant

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Whenyouarent
    @Whenyouarent Před 2 měsíci +1332

    Swedens economy relies too much on Minecraft. No end update, bad economy!

    • @trrr938
      @trrr938 Před 2 měsíci +113

      And paradox interactive, don't forget eu4 or hoi4

    • @Draktand01
      @Draktand01 Před 2 měsíci +84

      @@trrr938All those DLCs are probably a way to appease the govt’s economic agenda, lol.

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 Před 2 měsíci +8

      Isn’t Minecraft owned by Microsoft?

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před 2 měsíci

      @@tylerclayton6081 are you saying sweden is a puppet state of US?

    • @wotermelon_
      @wotermelon_ Před 2 měsíci +33

      @@tylerclayton6081 Bro it's joke.
      (But those DLCs are very much government's economic agenda)

  • @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja
    @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja Před 2 měsíci +875

    7 years ago me and my mates studied the Swedish economic situation. We concluded that because a large part of the population is planning on being in debt for 30+ years, just a mere 1+% increase of the interest rate would cause the economy to decline. This also made Sweden particularly vulnerable to inflation, as the way inflation will be dealt is by increasing interest rate. So basically, any drastic changes to the global economy would (and did) hit Sweden extra hard.

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Před 2 měsíci +32

      debt is a great maginifier of a good economic situation, but it also intensifies economic shocks indeed.

    • @Hardcore_Remixer
      @Hardcore_Remixer Před 2 měsíci +56

      ​@@ayoCC Nah. I have been avoiding debt as if it is a plague and I have never regreted this. I ain't gonna trust the banks to not increase the amount of money I have to return if I am to burrow money. Better safe than sorry.

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@Hardcore_Remixer you should try shariah bank. they offer loan without usury/interest.

    • @JanBruunAndersen
      @JanBruunAndersen Před 2 měsíci +11

      It is not a 1 % increase in interests that causes the economy to decline. As mentioned at #3:50, it is combination of higher interests and short-term mortgages. My mortgage is a fixed rate 30-year loan, so no matter what the interest rate is it will not affect my economic situation.

    • @HeadsFullOfEyeballs
      @HeadsFullOfEyeballs Před 2 měsíci +36

      ​@@rizkyadiyanto7922 It's true that they _technically_ don't charge interest, but that doesn't mean you actually pay less for your loan than with a Western bank. Islamic banks aren't charities.

  • @TheMasterTeddy
    @TheMasterTeddy Před 2 měsíci +433

    In Germany we have the same problem. Germany and Sweden are both exporting nations, and the high interest rates and the decline of China are poison for both of our economies.

    • @arnewengertsmann9111
      @arnewengertsmann9111 Před 2 měsíci +25

      We also have the same problem with our education system. We need to invest heavily in it.

    • @MB-xq3pq
      @MB-xq3pq Před 2 měsíci +40

      you also have same problem with crime becouse of mass imigration

    • @arnewengertsmann9111
      @arnewengertsmann9111 Před 2 měsíci +61

      @@MB-xq3pqActually the criminal rate was pretty stable between 2000 and 2015 and is sinking since 2016 by araound 2%. Look it up, if you don't believe me.

    • @GreatRetro
      @GreatRetro Před 2 měsíci +7

      The answer is - INNOVATE!!!
      If Germany think of something that ppl REALLY WANT - they'll buy it!!! Like your BMW's, Mercedese's and Audis - everybody wanted them!!!

    • @Teutathis
      @Teutathis Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@arnewengertsmann9111This is certainly not the case in Sweden and we can draw a clear connection to immigration. As I doubt Germany is better than we are at integrating these people and making them a productive part of your societies, the only explanation I have to the stats showing a decrease is that your government is still actively trying to hide it like ours did not too long ago.

  • @Keikboi
    @Keikboi Před 2 měsíci +139

    Really sloppy video. They mention that Sweden losing out on the "Brain business jobs" but first show a graph (without specifying year??) that compares countries, and follows it by one that compares regions (also without specifying year). The graphs have absolutely no bearing on the point being made.

  • @dynamo8846
    @dynamo8846 Před 2 měsíci +268

    the educational system in sweden used to be super centralized up until the 90's. People were complaining how the state controlled system was really inefficient, which it to be fair was. The current system gives schools funding based on the number of enrolled students, meaning schools have to compete for students free market style, using good grades and teachers to imporove thier reputation. Combine this with private schools being allowed to make a profit and you got a system where private ventures can bribe students with inflated grades and offer good teachers better salaries than communal schools, resulting in them getting funding and pocketing taxpayer money. Theres been talks since forever that it should change, yet no action.

    • @wotermelon_
      @wotermelon_ Před 2 měsíci +16

      Now imagine a system where there is only private school who decide the curriculum by which corporation funds them and who can charge the students whatever tuition they like and pay the teachers whatever they want.
      This already happens in many countries.

    • @zeytelaloi
      @zeytelaloi Před 2 měsíci +5

      Yes they need to reward schools not by how many students they can get but by some other metric related educational quality. One way would be to reward them based off of student performances, but critics would argue it would put undue stress on the students etc who do take national exams but which aren't related to their grades.

    • @BeesKneesBenjamin
      @BeesKneesBenjamin Před 2 měsíci +1

      Heyyy that sounds like the university I study at hahaha

    • @fikujez
      @fikujez Před 2 měsíci +19

      I work for a private school (Engelska Skolan). We don't make more than public school teachers - our union statistics actually show that we are severely underpaid. They lure us in with a promise of a good salary, and many get tricked because they don't realise just how expensive life in Sweden is. Even those aware they're underpaid often stay because on balance, their quality of life is still higher than in their home country. Once you are in the private sector it's very hard to switch, even once you get certified in Sweden, because public schools largely ignore applicants from foreign backgrounds. The teachers who quit are also easily replaced by more workforce from abroad.

    • @fikujez
      @fikujez Před 2 měsíci +11

      ​​@@zeytelaloidepends how the performance is measured. The problem is schools in poorer districts, let's say Rinkeby or Husby, work with students who don't even speak Swedish, are years behind in all the skills, sometimes they even have borderline illiterate parents. They're never gonna have the same results as the children of wealthy families in inner Stockholm. This system would only be fair if the schools were evaluated by added value.

  • @lynxon9939
    @lynxon9939 Před 2 měsíci +29

    Another reason for our shit economics is Germany. When the piplines busted, Germany became dependent on Swedish energy, causing a massive price hike that chocked many house owners, with bills some months surpassing 1000 Euros for a household. Caught many off guard and many people had to bust their savings to keep up with interest hikes and the electrical bills that were surging in Southern Sweden.

    • @thomasmerlin4990
      @thomasmerlin4990 Před 2 měsíci +16

      Germany's problem is that they have said no to nuclear power in favor of an energiewende that is proving to be a complete failure.

    • @jvsyoutube3298
      @jvsyoutube3298 Před 2 měsíci +6

      yeah, the price for electricity has also skyrocketed in sweden, because of stupid monopoly system that only benefits the electric companys.

  • @AB-gm4yi
    @AB-gm4yi Před 2 měsíci +203

    The Swedish economy has been pumped with no interest rate for years, making it too cheap to get loans, both as a household and company. This of course backfired when Riksbanken were forced to shockraise the interest rate to try to curb the inflation. While it did help with the inflation it's still too high. The cost of living is still climbing too much, rising food prices, rising fee for rental apartments and so on. Then we also suffer from greedflation, where companies raise the prices higher than they really need, and blaming that it's justified because of the inflation.

    • @JanBruunAndersen
      @JanBruunAndersen Před 2 měsíci +31

      Shockraise interest rate? Ahh, young whipsnapper... The current rates are nothing compared to when Riksbanken raised its interest rates to 500 % back in 1992.

    • @artman12
      @artman12 Před 2 měsíci +10

      This exact scenario seems to be playing out in most countries in the world right now. It’s not unique to Sweden.

    • @AB-gm4yi
      @AB-gm4yi Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@JanBruunAndersen yes let's hope it won't come to that...

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@artman12 We all should've been in a recession by now in Europe. My country the Netherlands has to cut back spending too this year. We actually did very well here the last years. During COVID we actually had growth. We sell a lot of agricultural goods in the Netherlands, so we had benefit of the food prices going up.
      We have one of the biggest rises of housing prices in Europe though. 8% to 10% rise expected this year again. It's extremely bad here because we are one of the most dense populated countries of Europe. We got 17 million people. Sweden, Norway and Finland together have 20 million people in comparison.
      The 1 kg cheese blocks went up like 200% overnight in my country, meats and bread too. Blame those Russians and some price gauging.
      Do rich people have fixed rate mortgages and poorer people floating mortgages in Sweden?

    • @Kanelbullah
      @Kanelbullah Před 2 měsíci +1

      The ones taking the hardest hit are the self employed. If you have an income it's manageable, but it aint fun.

  • @moocorp4574
    @moocorp4574 Před 2 měsíci +286

    This is all about interest rates. We have high private debt and almost all floating interest rates.
    It will have the opposite effect when the interest rates go the other way. Then people will create videos saying the Swedish economy is extremely strong.

    • @walideg5304
      @walideg5304 Před 2 měsíci +10

      Very true. The ECB will dicrease its director rates in June and i guess the Bank of Sweden will shortly follow.

    • @Aschii123
      @Aschii123 Před 2 měsíci

      Just wait for it :)

    • @FightingMango
      @FightingMango Před 2 měsíci +6

      Yeah. Extremely annoying with so many floating rates but our banks seemed to give terrible rates for longer fixed rates where Denmark at the same times were giving stupid low and fantastic rates for like 15 years at a time.

    • @JanBruunAndersen
      @JanBruunAndersen Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@FightingMango - 15, 20, or even 30 years fixed mortgages. One reason the rates can be kept low is that 1) The loan is capped at 80 % of the assessed value of the house, 2) There is an payment default insurance surcharge added to loan, 3) In case of a default on the loan, the bank has first dips on money from the sale of the house.
      Combined, this makes it a very low-risk loan for the the people/banks that finance the loan, and thus lower interests.

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Před 2 měsíci

      Sweden has also lots of tax avoidance and no inheritance tax, right? It's basically killing the middle class and helping debt rise. You don't even have free education and healthcare too.

  • @lx4
    @lx4 Před 2 měsíci +48

    To say that the Moderate probably will be voted out in the next election is a bit of a stretch. Judging by the polls it's about 50-50, if Sweden will get a left or right-wing government next.
    If we get a right-wing government it will almost certainly include the moderates and most likely be led by them. A less likely scenario for a right-wing government is one led by the Swedish democrats with the moderates taking some of the most powerful ministries.

    • @AleskyMaxomovishPeshkov
      @AleskyMaxomovishPeshkov Před 2 měsíci

      Which one will protect human artists and talent from being replaced by A.I? Because I heard Sweden is one of the few countries willing to do that. Someone told me that on Quora when I asked if there are any countries out there that are willing to protect human artists and creatives from being replaced by A.I.

    • @cubismo85
      @cubismo85 Před 2 měsíci +5

      It would be practically impossible for this government to continue another 4 years with the current opinion results unless they invite the swedish democrats. They cannot create a government when 20% vote for swedish democrats and 50% vote for the leftist parties.

    • @lx4
      @lx4 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@cubismo85 To be honest the Sweden Democrats are de facto members of the government right now. They don't hold any cabinet positions but much of the government's priorities are set in consultation with the Sweden Democrats. So far they seem satisfied with this arrangement.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      M and SAP have grown more similar. SAP governments rarely roll back changes made by M governments. They both see eachother as the competing leading government parties at the moment. Liberal-conservative M has replaced social-liberal Folkpartiet in this role historically. An MSAP government would be the final confirmation that these two co-run the country.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      @@lx4 It creates an odd balance where the one with the least ministerial seats has a great amount of power. Social liberal L and christian democrat Kd have more ministerial seats but their critics say they have become simple administrators.

  • @researcher--
    @researcher-- Před 2 měsíci +169

    In Milan we lowered the problem of alcoholism by banning metal can sales at and after a certain hour, the hour when most people bought alcohol. So, the city council did not have to say "we will ban alcohol", which would have caused a riot, nobody noticed they indirectly made it more difficult to practice alcoholism and no riot happened.

    • @carstengrooten3686
      @carstengrooten3686 Před 2 měsíci +16

      That is pretty smart

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 2 měsíci +14

      Poi la gente impara e comincia a comprare l'alcol prima.

    • @researcher--
      @researcher-- Před 2 měsíci

      thank you, we have good doctors here@@carstengrooten3686

    • @sciencefliestothemoon2305
      @sciencefliestothemoon2305 Před 2 měsíci +14

      Wow, no idea how alcoholism works on psychological and biochemical but reducing the access.
      Talk about treating the symptom and not the cause...

    • @researcher--
      @researcher-- Před 2 měsíci

      not my fault the eu is printing too much money, which causes inflation, which causes alcoholism@@sciencefliestothemoon2305

  • @Ea-pb2tu
    @Ea-pb2tu Před 2 měsíci +61

    The system failure in as you said "free schools" arent referencing the regular schools, they're referencing the private schools. We call private schools friskolor.

    • @duddisnoobyay3859
      @duddisnoobyay3859 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Privatskolor och friskolor är inte samma sak, en privat skola drivs av ett företag i syfte att gå med vinst medan friskolor drivs av stiftelser och är aldrig vinstdrivande.

    • @cubismo85
      @cubismo85 Před 2 měsíci

      @@duddisnoobyay3859 Finns vinstdrivande friskolor. En privatskola får in sina pengar från eleverna eller deras föräldrar, medans friskolor får skolpeng från staten. De flesta privatskolor är vinstdrivande och de flesta friskolor, men inte alla. Skillnaden är var de får in sina pengar, om det är från privatpersoner eller staten.

    • @JoppeW
      @JoppeW Před 2 měsíci +17

      @@duddisnoobyay3859Friskolor kan visst gå med vinst. Verkligare skillnaden ligger i att friskolor finansieras inte av elevavgifter vilket privatskolor gör.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      @@JoppeW Idédrivna skolor startade sitt eget förbund medan friskolor har ett annat. Det blev ingen revolution för de idédrivna skolorna. Friskolornas riksförbund talar som om de representerade båda.

  • @AlexG3Z
    @AlexG3Z Před 2 měsíci +30

    As a student here, the job market is not hiring and the wages are not increasing, meanwhile most prices have almost gone up to soon enough double.
    A cheeseburger used to be 9kr, now it is 19kr

    • @tr0fast280
      @tr0fast280 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Det har väl ändå gått en hel del år sedan man kunde köpa en Cheeseburgare för 10kr?

    • @Svikthuset
      @Svikthuset Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@tr0fast280Dryga 5 år sedan en cheesburgare kostade 8kr. Brukade köpa ett par stycken efter en krogrunda så att man hade till dagen efter.

    • @korpen2858
      @korpen2858 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@SvikthusetFyfan att värma dagen efter 🤮

    • @baltbull
      @baltbull Před 2 měsíci

      @@tr0fast280Tror det faktiskt enbart gått lite över ett år sedan en cheeseburgare kostade 10 spänn

    • @UserNameWasCensored
      @UserNameWasCensored Před 2 měsíci +3

      What? Where? There's no place in Sweden that sold cheeseburgers for 8 kr each five years ago. Not in Stockholm, not in Malmö, not even in Jokkmokk. Even 20 years ago I had to dish out at least 25 kr for a tunnbrödsrulle (med räkor) at the nearest kiosk after a night out. And that's just mostly mashed potatoes made from powder...

  • @jhwheuer
    @jhwheuer Před 2 měsíci +104

    Funny how the GDP follows ABBA's chart performance

    • @Ivytheherbert
      @Ivytheherbert Před 2 měsíci +9

      Except ABBA had a brief resurgence recently thanks to ABBA Voyage in London :|

    • @jhwheuer
      @jhwheuer Před 2 měsíci

      @@Ivytheherbert are they still paying swedish taxes?

    • @joehoe222
      @joehoe222 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Sad though, Sweden has very good musicians other than ABBA.

    • @JH-lo9ut
      @JH-lo9ut Před 2 měsíci

      Funny how people still think they are clever with Abba/Ikea/Meatball jokes.

    • @spaniardsrmoors6817
      @spaniardsrmoors6817 Před měsícem

      @@JH-lo9ut Abba/Ikea/Meatball yahhhhhh

  • @laurentdrozin812
    @laurentdrozin812 Před 2 měsíci +150

    Too much private debt. Especially mortgage. Cartels dominate all sectors of the economy: energy production, transport, retail, banking and more. These oligopolies conspire to extract as much wealth as possible from the public. Administrations and public sectors are mired in an impenetrable jungle of red tape and cannot take decisive action about anything.

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad Před 2 měsíci +6

      Sounds like Canada.

    • @cia5649
      @cia5649 Před 2 měsíci +7

      wouldnt say oligopolies exist there in sweden even when there is few companies the state has a hand in it such as power is vattenfall transport is SJ banking is SBAB as for red tape well it isnt that much unless your talking about construction then there is a ton

    • @gimlifan12
      @gimlifan12 Před 2 měsíci +8

      @@cia5649 I run a ventilation/heating business in Sweden. For example chimeny sweeping is completely mandated by local governments. Which ever (large) company that has the most lucrative pitch to local government politicians gets the contract for ALL of those jobs. Also the mandatory control of in-house climate of residential buildings is a politicised license. The beurocrats have complete control of all sectors. Of course it's important to have licenses and checks in order to uphold quality, but our system is nothing but a big "pick-and-choose" of winners that the political local governments and agencies run. Almost never is it anyone from the relevant industry which does the decision making.

    • @cia5649
      @cia5649 Před 2 měsíci +14

      @@gimlifan12 well the problem is that the local or regional goverments pick the chepeast option 99 percent of the time onlt for cost to suddenly increase when the contractor admits he needs more. Also if the cheapest isnt picked its bec the company probablt offered a comfy job once the politician retired

    • @hurrdurrmurrgurr
      @hurrdurrmurrgurr Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@Desmaad Sounds like he described everywhere.

  • @eef_freef
    @eef_freef Před 2 měsíci +70

    yo thanks for showing that gdp graphic 15 times

    • @pangaea5258
      @pangaea5258 Před 2 měsíci

      hahaha thought the same thing

  • @blaich2
    @blaich2 Před 2 měsíci +11

    This was unusually biased and uninformed for TLDR. The school system is not in tatters. Swedens students preform well above average in PISA studies compared to OECD averages. In the most recent PISA report, the Swedish ministry "skolverket" states that compared to the result 10 years ago, most of the falling result is caused by the increased number of students of immigrant background, who naturally have a lower score due to language and other socialeconomic issues. But as a group immigrants still preformed better than 10 years ago, shrinking the average distance to Swedish background students higher result. Does this sound like a system in tatters to you?
    Your link between housing market and bankrupcies isn't clear either. Sure they are both happening but you have no proof they are causally related as you claim.
    You also incorrectly directly link the weaker public services to the social issues. You have no proof of they are correlated and it's not something a majority of Swedes would agree with. The crime, as an example, has been proven i research to have little correlation to poverty or a decline of the wealthfare state. Rather background and cultural factors have been proven to be the main drivers behind the crime wave.
    On the political front you seem to miss that the Sweden Democrats are supporting the government and the government is implementing it's policies, holding press conferences together among other things. They are a part of it in all ways but minister posts. And no, they won't be able to be a governing party as they have no other option than "the Moderates" as a coalition partner. It's not the biggest party who runs the country in Sweden, it's the biggest coalition (which today includes Sweden democrats)
    To sum it up, Swedens development is K shaped, and looking at averages is intellectually dishonest and misleading. Most of Sweden is doing well, but a big part of the population is lagging behind, mostly immigrants who struggle to overcome the high demands and performance thresholds swedish society is built around. But even if you look at how immigrants are doing, they are doing way better than 10 years ago, but the group is bigger as a percentage and as a result is drawing down the average. Which is to be expected.
    You can do better TLDR.

    • @keyboarddancers7751
      @keyboarddancers7751 Před 2 měsíci +1

      "... immigrants who struggle to overcome the high demands and performance thresholds Swedish society is built around." Am I right in saying that open debate on these issues has for a long time been stifled in Sweden?

  • @hfbk858
    @hfbk858 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I love how we can all watch the same video and come to different conclusions.
    I think the main culprit for the decline of the Swedish welfare state is the lack of investment in public services. After the global financial crisis of 2008, the idea of cutting public debt became popular and many European countries took this route. Sometimes, you definitely need to public debt and you have to keep it manageable based on your economy.
    However, when you underinvest for years in public services for years, you public services will definitely lag behind and that’s what is happening to Sweden.
    Once the Swedes get inflation under control, they need to invest in the welfare state and fix the private debt situation. Private citizens appear to be too vulnerable to interest rate hikes and this needs to be kept under control to prevent sticky inflationary periods.

  • @c.g.silver8782
    @c.g.silver8782 Před 2 měsíci +19

    what's gone wrong with * economy
    *insert country

    • @keithmartin1328
      @keithmartin1328 Před 2 měsíci +5

      I was thinking the same. Seems a lot of countries have problems with the economy.

    • @vincentleeiner3015
      @vincentleeiner3015 Před 2 měsíci

      global economy = global problems@@keithmartin1328

  • @johnslater1460
    @johnslater1460 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I notice that you say "Europe" and then immediately display stats for the EU. Hence UK, Norway, Switzerland are excluded from the stats. I haven't heard they had been cut off from the continent .. maybe floating out to the mid-atlantic?

  • @Jasonshelton-
    @Jasonshelton- Před 2 měsíci +8

    It is worth noting that the world economy is a complex system influenced by numerous factors beyond a single country's monetary policy, making me to ponder on what are the best possible ways to hedge against inflation, and I've overheard people say inflation is a money-eater thus worried about my savings around $200k

    • @jimmydan12
      @jimmydan12 Před 2 měsíci +4

      There is always a market recovery. But then Investing through an advisor who understands the market, however, is simpler and yields higher returns. I started working with my CFP with less than $100,000, and as of right now, I'm just $17,000 short of half a million dollar portfollo.

    • @AndrewSandy712
      @AndrewSandy712 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Certain Ai companies are rumoured to be overvalued and might cause a market correction, I’d suggest you go with a managed portfolio, but even those don’t perform so well, so it’s best you reach out to a proper fiduciary to guide you, that’s what works for my spouse and I.

    • @ben_dukeson
      @ben_dukeson Před 2 měsíci +1

      this is inspiring! could you be kind enough with details of your advisor please? highly suspect i'm much too small game lately to handle investing myself, figured out its best to consult a license professional at this point

  • @bikkiikun
    @bikkiikun Před 2 měsíci +19

    Privatisation of public services have almost always proven to be disastrous. And this is not something people couldn't have guessed beforehand... when you add a profit motive to an essential service that is run as a monopoly. You not only get a less and or worse at a higher price, but the Corporation running this service has a strong incentive to blackmail the government into bailouts.
    Privatisations may provide a short term benefit and look great in the books, but it is just that... it looks good on a few quarterly sheets, with hell to pay a little while later.

    • @RoyalLegend1000
      @RoyalLegend1000 Před 2 měsíci +5

      not to mention that they work for profit, not to help people

    • @eken1725
      @eken1725 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Also a lot of times it is sold quite cheap to a friend of a politician. "In Sweden we don't have corruption" our politicians proudly tell the rest of the world and the people they serve, because of course, corruption is only when some guy comes with a briefcase full of money, selling public services for waaaaay less than it is worth to a buddy who will give you a high paying job after your political career is over is just simply a normal deal.

    • @bikkiikun
      @bikkiikun Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@eken1725 :Even without corruption, those sell-offs are often done during times of low cash, so you have duress... which automatically leads to a price lower than the market would offer.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@eken1725 I don't like how every time this happens, there is some choir of free marketeers and libertarians praising this as the ideologically pure method.
      I don't like how it was possible to leave municipal government, form a landlord company, buy the houses used at your old job and rent them back to the successors at your old municipal job. All the while being praised as a free market genius.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@bikkiikun Then you need to pay rent on the hospice you used to own, and in a couple year the rent eats up what you made on the sale. But at least the former politician turned landlord who rents it makes a profit. And the municipality can't often build a second hospice or find a competitor.

  • @Cptnbond
    @Cptnbond Před 2 měsíci +87

    Several workforce sectors, such as healthcare, are based on consultants, making it more expensive. The fault is that government-run hospitals traditionally used low wages for their workforce. No wonder they flee to the private sector (and move abroad like move to Norway) or become consultants; thus, now, the state has to pay higher salaries to cover the profit for the consultant companies. What a stupid strategy, and not a recipe for a healthy economy.

    • @RUHappyATM
      @RUHappyATM Před 2 měsíci +7

      And you expect the good doctor who saves your life be paid the same as a plumber?
      A Jewish anaesthetist once told me why he became a doctor.
      His father said as a doctor, in times of crises, people will always be able to barter a chicken for his knowledge.
      Try that as a lawyer.

    • @ivanvikalo4995
      @ivanvikalo4995 Před 2 měsíci +6

      I am Swedish living in Stockholm and it is completely true. Everyone working in healthcare must be paid more, or alternatively shut down public healthcare so that the market takes over. Personally, I favor the first option, but this mix we have isn't really working optimally

    • @Theorimlig
      @Theorimlig Před 2 měsíci

      @@RUHappyATM Many plumbers make a lot of money!

    • @RUHappyATM
      @RUHappyATM Před 2 měsíci

      @@Theorimlig
      like 1%, mostly those who employ other plumbers...LOL.

    • @sagm5674
      @sagm5674 Před 2 měsíci

      Neoliberalism

  • @crapmalls
    @crapmalls Před 2 měsíci +109

    Nothing a million migrants can't fix

    • @Johnny-Michael
      @Johnny-Michael Před 2 měsíci +7

      lol

    • @pistoneteo
      @pistoneteo Před 2 měsíci +18

      2 millions to get sure

    • @dw620
      @dw620 Před 2 měsíci +38

      "If in doubt, add millions of impoverished new citizens who aren't overly keen on integrating".
      Yep; that'll work! 👍

    • @TTTT-sj3vz
      @TTTT-sj3vz Před 2 měsíci +10

      bro didn't watch the video 😂 classical right-wing mindset

    • @Pattern_Noticer
      @Pattern_Noticer Před 2 měsíci +5

      If 1 million migrants are good why are 1 billion double plus good. There are after all 1.5 billion people in Africa why not invite them all in.

  • @Leaf8823
    @Leaf8823 Před 2 měsíci +37

    if you privatise essential public service the public will suffer, the privatized entity only goal is profit.

    • @mats66
      @mats66 Před 2 měsíci +6

      💯

    • @jonatanolsen37
      @jonatanolsen37 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yep. Health care, Schools, City planning, Police, Military should all be ruled by the state. The rest can be a free market.

    • @bellafahleson
      @bellafahleson Před 2 měsíci

      Switzerland have good privet helfcare

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      @@bellafahleson We also have examples of good private healthcare. The problem is that there are very few regulations in Sweden. It's much to easy to focus only on profit witch has lead to tax money going to international venture capital companys moving the profits funded by Swedish taxes being moved to other countrys. That money was ment to be used for healthcare not suporting rich shareholders abroad.

    • @feha92
      @feha92 Před 2 měsíci +1

      _some_ privatization can be fine. And the way schools work (the "profit" is given from the state, per student that is enrolled and graduating) is one such thing - the issue is rather a lack of oversight, regulation and enforcement. Like, maybe make it required that the private school has no profit over 5-year periods? Or at least that none is paid out to shareholders/owners/bosses? At least limit it greatly (maybe have the amount allowed be derived from the oversight's findings on quality of education?).

  • @gdf_6c
    @gdf_6c Před 2 měsíci +26

    6:55 - "What happens next?"
    The answer is usually 'fascism' these days

    • @EmpiricalSin
      @EmpiricalSin Před 2 měsíci +2

      Which party is that in Sweden then?

    • @entonberg3945
      @entonberg3945 Před 2 měsíci

      Yep, the sweden democrats (previously swedens fascist party) are gaining in the polls every day, sad times we live in.

    • @wotermelon_
      @wotermelon_ Před 2 měsíci +5

      UK's been answering the question with that answer for a over decade now.
      With even a brief look at history, their grades for that answer are nothing to be surprised of.

    • @gdf_6c
      @gdf_6c Před 2 měsíci

      @@EmpiricalSin - maybe none for now. Give it a few months and we'll see liberals pushing further and further to the right

    • @DinKompis
      @DinKompis Před 2 měsíci

      @@EmpiricalSin the Sweden democrats haven't been shy about their idea to change the constitution so they can strip anyone of citizenship, ban funding for the opposition and also be able to jail any person without any suspicion of crime.

  • @Dendarang
    @Dendarang Před 2 měsíci +10

    I like how the Eurozone is handling the inflation the best out of all EU currency zones. Almost as if having second most widely used currency in the world as your own offers a certain degree of protection and stability.

    • @thomasmerlin4990
      @thomasmerlin4990 Před 2 měsíci +2

      that's how it is

    • @stefan.astrand
      @stefan.astrand Před 2 měsíci +1

      At the cost of fiscal autonomy and economic growth.

    • @torbjornlekberg7756
      @torbjornlekberg7756 Před 2 měsíci

      It was not that long ago when this was proven false. Ask Greece.

    • @thomasmerlin4990
      @thomasmerlin4990 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@torbjornlekberg7756 Greece rigged its budgets to join the EU. it is a very different issue from inflation.

    • @torbjornlekberg7756
      @torbjornlekberg7756 Před 2 měsíci

      @@thomasmerlin4990 However, the negative effects on the Euro, caused by the economic malpractice of many South European nations, Greece most of all, showed how vulnerable such a wide currency can be.

  • @Muthwill
    @Muthwill Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for this amazing video! Living in Sweden, this is a topic that's been circling in my friend groups for a while now. It's great to now have a video with data to point towards as much of the speculation has been around Covid and why things are seemingly just getting worse.

  • @alexbaytenov
    @alexbaytenov Před 2 měsíci +5

    Quality editing on this one, very satisfying smooth and rhythmic transitions!

  • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
    @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Před 2 měsíci +26

    4:23 that's not what disposable income is in economics.
    You should know it merely means "income after taxes", not "income left over for fun stuff". Housing prices rising does not impact disposable incime in any way. There is a separate term called "discretionary income" that covers it. This can cause confusion with the more everyday understanding of disposable income, but just thought you should know since this is a lot more analytical topic than everyday conversation.

  • @RRaymer
    @RRaymer Před 2 měsíci +7

    Crazy thing is Swedens unemployment rate is close to 10%. That is banana republic levels imo

    • @Keikboi
      @Keikboi Před 2 měsíci +1

      if you instead look at employment rate it's 77.5%, which is the 8th highest in the OECD. So, it's a matter of perspective.

    • @RRaymer
      @RRaymer Před 2 měsíci

      @@Keikboi Employment rate is not too significant. The UK for example has a relatively low employment rate. Partly because there is a large part of the population who have a lot of generational wealth, and don’t need to work. Same thing for the US. Whereas Sweden, has almost 10% of the population actively looking for work with limited success.

    • @Just_another_Euro_dude
      @Just_another_Euro_dude Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@RRaymer And you think there's no people in Sweden with a generational wealth? 😂 Are you ok?

    • @RRaymer
      @RRaymer Před 2 měsíci

      @@Just_another_Euro_dudeOf course there is some. The data comes from Henley & Partners who specialise in this field. Sweden is generally considered as a load bearing economy. There is a small sum of individuals who generate an extreme amount of wealth. In Britain or the US. They are more unequal in the sense where there is a substantial amount of the population who generate large volumes of money and pay little tax. So they become economically inactive.

    • @banzaaiiiii
      @banzaaiiiii Před měsícem

      I agree but UK and US got much bigger and diversified sectors and jobs I'm aware of safety net but it`s still very embarrassing 10%, almost on Greece and Albania level

  • @madamehussein
    @madamehussein Před 2 měsíci +59

    The right blames criminality on unregulated immigration "and" lax law enforcement (here the political left reluctantly agrees). This situation has been rectified to some extent with strictter laws and harsher sentences, prisons are currently overflowing.
    To complicate matters further: Immigration hasn't typically been a partisan issue. In fact it was the moderate-led Reinfeldt government who rolled out the carpet during the syrian refugee crises and claimed all immigrants were welcome. The only party consistently critical of immigration has been the Sweden Democrats, which is why they are now increasing in popularity.
    Education is also a complicated issue. The social democrats are partly to blame, since they transferred the task of education management to individual municipalities and partly dismantled the old central oversight agency (Skolöverstyrelsen). If you read the memoirs of then education minister (later finance and premier minister) Göran Persson, he claims this was partly done to undermine the status of the then well respected (and in Persson's view, possibly bourgoisie) teachets. This last part succeeded beyond all expectations.
    The succeeding right wing government dismantled what little central coordination remained, and instituted a wide-reaching free-marked reform, where private schools were subsididized with public money tied to each accepted student. Though the initial point was to help driven teachers start their own schools bsed on their own pedagogical theories, the system was quickly co-opted by big business, making cuts to make profits from siphoned taxpayer money.
    Here too successive governments have tried to rectify the situation, by increasing teathcer pay (and therefore hopefully status). The current government looks set to increse the authority of schools/headmasters over the board, which in my opinion (having worked as an abulating substitute teacher for two years in dozens if not hundreds of schools) is probably long overdue.

    • @Wilhelmofdeseret
      @Wilhelmofdeseret Před 2 měsíci +5

      What a surprise! We told you so. Yall got exactly what you voted for.

    • @madamehussein
      @madamehussein Před 2 měsíci

      Lol I think I actually voted Sweden Democrat in 2012

    • @arthurschildgen5522
      @arthurschildgen5522 Před 2 měsíci

      @@madamehussein What changed?

    • @madamehussein
      @madamehussein Před 2 měsíci

      @@arthurschildgen5522 I continued voting for men until I coud a tiny libertarian party (0.2 percent of the vote) which berre represented dmdy views. And I probably misspoke, the parliamentary electino before the refugee crisis would have been 2014 and not 2012.

    • @JasonAtlas
      @JasonAtlas Před 2 měsíci +5

      Opening your education up to big business. That's not a good move.

  • @studentstudent5044
    @studentstudent5044 Před 2 měsíci +4

    This happens to Every country, you hshe a bad period and then you get out on top. Sweden still has a GDP of 600 billion and in 2026 it Will have 730 billion.

  • @erikstenviken2652
    @erikstenviken2652 Před 2 měsíci +14

    Do we have an economic crise? I must have missed that…. But hey, what do I know, i am just a swede.

    • @CupofKiwi
      @CupofKiwi Před 2 měsíci +4

      I was wondering the same!

    • @Arcifer
      @Arcifer Před 2 měsíci +2

      same, a crisis might be a bit of an overstatement, if you increase the interest rates to twice what it is now, then yeah, but ofc global economics affect us too. It's not a crisis... its just temporarily tougher.

    • @caseypittman9950
      @caseypittman9950 Před měsícem

      I know, right? I go to university in Sweden, am an American, yet I didn't really notice any crisis.

  • @ShienChannel
    @ShienChannel Před 2 měsíci +78

    They let too many engineers in the country! :D

    • @Kanelbullah
      @Kanelbullah Před 2 měsíci +22

      Doctors*

    • @Itsthebigmac
      @Itsthebigmac Před 2 měsíci +20

      Cultural enrichers

    • @ryboi1337
      @ryboi1337 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Are the engineers at least peaceful 😅

    • @StarfighterJohansson
      @StarfighterJohansson Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@ItsthebigmacThat term is exclusively used by racists so I guess thanks for self-identifying...

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      The current laws say that engineering students can't work in the country, that is immoral.

  • @thesnesgeek
    @thesnesgeek Před měsícem +2

    There is also a problem in plenty of swedish schools, that is way too generous grades in privatized schools. Teachers are ''forced'' to give school kids undeserved grades to improve it's repuatation. That is because with higher grades parents gets into the idea of placing thier kids in them. Even teachers who gives them deserved grades are forced to change them otherwise lower wages or fired, said by the principal. Before the 90's, Swedish school we're controlled by the state.

  • @carthkaras6449
    @carthkaras6449 Před 2 měsíci +5

    It seems to me that Belgium and France are a bit similar in terms of the type of economy, is this ultimately the most robust type of economy we can have in Europe? Maybe an economist can undeceive me in the comments...

  • @Nike-gs8ig
    @Nike-gs8ig Před 2 měsíci +35

    Is any country doing good right now? It feels like nobody is okay right now.

    • @Pinkhairedkilla
      @Pinkhairedkilla Před 2 měsíci +7

      Switzerland as always ig, finland and Norway

    • @malcolmy3413
      @malcolmy3413 Před 2 měsíci +1

      USA 🇺🇸 is doing very good. But the MAGA crowd wants us to believe otherwise

    • @patu2175
      @patu2175 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@Pinkhairedkilla I wouldn't include Finland in this list. 😅

    • @0xCAFEF00D
      @0xCAFEF00D Před 2 měsíci +14

      The US is entirely OK basically and there's others too.
      Most others are not OK to various degrees.

    • @Eltener123
      @Eltener123 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Going off of real wage growth, Belgium is doing great

  • @NanderK
    @NanderK Před 2 měsíci +4

    The quote about “system failure” specifically relates to the charter school system not the overall education system. Only 12% of students go to charter schools (per Wikipedia), public schools are still by far the most common.

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      A big problem is that public schools have to keep a readynes for when the private schools failes. That is a big cost.

    • @Halesnaxlors
      @Halesnaxlors Před 2 měsíci

      @@user-gd1od5cs1vYes, and similar to chartered private healthcare, they can just move their problem children over to a nearby public school, which legally has to accept this. This becomes a big resource resource drain for the public schools.
      There are essentially two types of private charter schools in Sweden. One type that just does everything as cheap as possible, not caring about any problems. The other is the "elite" school, which fixes its problems by offloading them onto public schools.

  • @PB2001PB
    @PB2001PB Před měsícem +1

    Kristersson does not have "an approvement rating of -20". It is mathematically not possible.

  • @TexRex6352
    @TexRex6352 Před 2 měsíci +5

    "HUMANITARIAN SUPERPOWER. DIVERSITY IS OUR STRENGTH. IF ONLY WE WERE ALL LIKE SWEDEN." 😂👌

    • @Swingmesideways
      @Swingmesideways Před 2 měsíci

      Swedes got a crazy big ego 😂 Sweden is a shit country trust me I am swedish

  • @C.Columbus
    @C.Columbus Před 2 měsíci +9

    "whatever the cause" when 90% of the people in jail is of arabian or african descent.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      Leaving office, buying a municipality hospice, renting it back to the municipality you worked where your old collegues still work is the accepted level of corruption.

  • @CaneBTC
    @CaneBTC Před 2 měsíci +22

    They like 10xed interest rates over night in a country that has no clue about a 30 year mortgage like what's common in the US. Swedes mostly have floating rates.

    • @ganyumaindayone1112
      @ganyumaindayone1112 Před 2 měsíci +3

      the US (atleast for regular people) gave up on floating rates after 2008 (for the most part) weird that swedes didnt learn the lesson

    • @reshuram4353
      @reshuram4353 Před 2 měsíci +12

      @@ganyumaindayone1112 the housing crisis of '08 was basically nonexistent in Sweden. Instead in 2008 there was the sovereign debt/Euro crisis in Europe at that time

    • @CaneBTC
      @CaneBTC Před 2 měsíci

      GFC in Sweden was largely a non-event, not so big losses because of own currency.@@ganyumaindayone1112

    • @NAYRUthunder99
      @NAYRUthunder99 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@reshuram4353 That was in 2014

    • @ahlsn7346
      @ahlsn7346 Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@ganyumaindayone1112 Because if you get a fixed rate for 30 years in Sweden and then sell your house after 5 years you will have to pay the bank for missing interest for 25 years. Also the floating interest rate has always been lower over time than any fixed rate. So the suggestions has always been to go floating and save the difference for the bad times.

  • @gatopardoantico5657
    @gatopardoantico5657 Před 2 měsíci +2

    please note that interest rates indirectly affect disposable [or after tax] income; they influence personal income and only then after tax income.

  • @thevoid5503
    @thevoid5503 Před měsícem +1

    The important lesson here: Don't do free markets or open borders.

  • @gaston6800
    @gaston6800 Před 2 měsíci +11

    My jaw dropped when I saw that government spending was 70% of GDP in the 90s. There's no way to have a country function properly with such an ourageous amount of spending. Even now at 48%, that's still HUGE.

  • @valdisfilks9427
    @valdisfilks9427 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Increased energy prices have caused this problem, Swedish industry depended on low cost energy, specifically electricity costs to be competitive. Now that low cost nuclear power was shut down by the greens and wind/solar does not work in Sweden companies are shutting down. Consumer electricity prices increased by 500%, because of unreliable wind/solar. Biofuel additive increases transport costs increased by 30%. EU had 16% biofuel, but the social democrats and green party in Sweden increased this to 30%. So, all production of food, products and everything that needs to be transported doubled in price. It became uneconomical in southern Sweden to have any industries, where 2 good nuclear power stations were closed down for ideological reasons by the green party. For example, baking bread factories were closed down. Any expansion of production went overseas. So Sweden has the problem of bad environmental policies causing unintended consequences. Wind is OK for intermittent high cost supply, solar is quite useless in the north. We see this now, but the damage has been done. Look at parallels to Germany where increased energy costs also caused social harm to the poorest people, reduced jobs etc. Now Sweden has reduced biofuel back to the EU 16% and plans to build new low cost, sustainable and reliable nuclear which works during our winters when wind/solar does not. But it will take time to fix the bad policies. Sweden is already at net zero, but solving climate change globally is imperative. Sweden which produces 0.02% of global CO2 cannot solve this, but it has harmed itself for no environmental, social or economic benefit. Be careful of well meaning ideologues. Stick to specialists, engineers and scientists.

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci +2

      I agree with most of what you write. Som problems. You claim that the closing of nuclear plants was for ideological reasond by the social demcrats. Actualy there was a referandum heald in 1980 where it was desided that we should fade out nuclear power plants. Also you want people to listen to specialists, enginears and scientists. Then we shouldn't have reduced the biofuel. There are other ways to keep the fuel prices low. Fuel is one of the most taxed things in Sweden. Reducing the biofule is not the way to go. If one listen to those you want us to that is going to have a big inpact on the inviroment. Just because Sweden is one of the best countrys in the world doesn't justify not doing our part. That is in my opinion equal to stick your head in the sand and pretend that the problem doesn't exist.

    • @RoyalLegend1000
      @RoyalLegend1000 Před 2 měsíci

      i agreed with you until you said about CO2, we need to stop seeing pr country and instead look pr person, if everyone is thinking pr country none will do anything

    • @valdisfilks9427
      @valdisfilks9427 Před 2 měsíci

      Most countries and people do nothing about CO2 already. We already have climate change policies where the minority in the west try to reduce CO2 while the majority in Asia, China, India, Africa, South America, Russia do nothing. CO2 emissions have increased globally, while countries like Germany/Sweden have caused energy poverty and social problems for their people with no benefit or reduction in CO2. Look at how few countries sign up for CO2 reductions at the COP summits. Look at Germany CO2 emissions from electricity production compared to France. Germany is about 5 time higher CO2 than France because of bad energiewende policies.closing down nuclear. There are dellusional beliefs that the rest of the world will follow Sweden with high petrol/diesel costs and unreliable wind/solar, this has been debunked and proven to fail. But symbol politics and virtue signaling are more important than meaningful sustainable, reliable and low cost solutions which reduce CO2 like nuclear. Look at France and Canada with successful CO2 reduction with nuclear. Sweden also reduced CO2 with nuclear but the extremist green party in Sweden stopped zero CO2 electricity production and increased electricity generation from high CO2 oil. Go figure. @@RoyalLegend1000

    • @RoyalLegend1000
      @RoyalLegend1000 Před 2 měsíci

      @@valdisfilks9427 like you said most country's do nothing, it's because of thr minuset that, "we do so little, do why should we do anything"
      Do you think people inn China will be gladly to do this, when people inn Sweeden domt do a shit
      Tho, I agree when it comes about Nuclear power, they are the 2th safer energy source (after water power)
      And talking down Nuclear plass has been a huge reason for the energy crisis
      Not to mention how stupid ot is to use coal instead of Nuclear power, when coal make more radioactivity
      But, when what you say about CO2 showes that you expect everyone else to do something while you can sit there and do nothing

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      The greens are a very small force in parliament, and has been so. Nothing they do is done without the approval of the others.
      M saw it as ideologically impure to fund large-scale infrastructure developments, including extending state credits to power plants. And the SAP usually accepts what M wants to change.

  • @sorro9384
    @sorro9384 Před 2 měsíci

    Very accurate good job !

  • @ES-ot6tg
    @ES-ot6tg Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hmm I live in Stockholm and it is very expensive here. But when I look around people are spending so much money. Everywhere it is full and idk it just doesn’t seem like people are struggling here

  • @eriktopolsky8531
    @eriktopolsky8531 Před 2 měsíci +28

    Could this be due to demografic changes that took place in past 2 decades ?

    • @Newbyte
      @Newbyte Před 2 měsíci

      Maybe you should watch the video

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci

      Not really. People taking to much loans to buy housing etc is not an immigartyion issue.
      Soem towns might ahve been very affected by it though (making that town/part of towns economy get imbalanced due to big immigration).

    • @mikael.wilhelm
      @mikael.wilhelm Před 2 měsíci +10

      Couldn't be. The elephant in the room surely has nothing to do with why the floor is collapsing.

    • @PSA78
      @PSA78 Před 2 měsíci

      A small part perhaps, but that's mostly impacted/magnified by other changes and failure to account for them.
      One side can't keep cutting in to the society to help their rich friends, and the other side can't ignore that it has made the society weak.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      The bank charges our company 8-10% interest for a loan, and gives 2-3% interest on savings. And I know the bank is not secretly ran by the dude begging outside the store.

  • @davidstacey1449
    @davidstacey1449 Před 2 měsíci +12

    The same as the UK. The more they've moved away from a social democratic economy to a more right wing neo-liberal economy the worse everything becomes.

    • @Arthion
      @Arthion Před 2 měsíci

      Oh absolutely, I'd imagine we'll look like todays Brittain is a decade or two at this current trajectory.

    • @Swingmesideways
      @Swingmesideways Před 2 měsíci

      😂 the social democrats is the ones that burning all money and when the money is gone the right take over and try to solv the F mess but they cant. Then the social take over and blame the right its a classic. Sossarna just give away money without getting something back do 6ou realy think thats good?😂

    • @herruu2499
      @herruu2499 Před 2 měsíci

      Get the fucking Moderates out of parliament please.

  • @g4m3life86
    @g4m3life86 Před měsícem

    Sweden is NOT Ikea, Avici, Nokia, Lutheranism, & H&M. Multifaceted market economy with something for everyone. Being of Swedish heritage myself, I consider these things

  • @dadikkedude
    @dadikkedude Před 16 dny

    Why does every government think privatization is a good thing

  • @TheSlyngel
    @TheSlyngel Před 2 měsíci +42

    So many missunderstandings in this video. First off the government has a majority in the parlament backing it since it has the support of the Swedish democrats. That makes it a majority Government by Swedish standards. Secondly the Swedish economy is by design the way it is, its not a bug its a feature this slowdown was expected long ago and when the recovery comes Sweden will grow quicker then the the rest of the EU. This is what the economic cycle looks like in Sweden. Sweden outperforms most other countries when inflation is low but suffers when its high. Same is true of the Swedish stockmarket which is very sensitive and fluctuates more then most but over time performs very well.
    The schools are a mess but its not the reason for the lowering of avrerage high skill workers the massive immigration of lowskill people are. The Swedes are not getting less educated but more uneducated people are entering the workforce.
    The rightwing coalition is doing well in the pols and will likely win the next election, the social democrats are the ones who are struggeling since they don't have any policies or a unified coalition. The next government will likely have the Swedishdemocrats in it as they are very popular and the policises of this goverment that are most popular are from the Swedish democrats. You kinda have to know the local kontext if you are going to make videos like this.

    • @Aschii123
      @Aschii123 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Couldn´t agree more, your analyze is spot on to what TLDR isn´t. We have just got a better government who will do real progress with all of Swedens problems with crime, economy, education and so on. But it will take more then just two years to fix decades of broken system and the sky high inflation isn´t helping more than hopefully lower the rising housing prices.

    • @TheBooban
      @TheBooban Před 2 měsíci +1

      I believe education is still worse off today because of so many trouble makers in school. Yet, it doesn’t matter in a range of subjects because jobs are outsourced to those Eastern European countries and India anyways, specifically IT jobs. Oh, if your employer can hire foreign workers at half the price, they won’t hire citizens? Who would have thunk it?!? So, don’t bother studying.

    • @Jajalaatmaar
      @Jajalaatmaar Před 2 měsíci

      @@TheBooban Schools have to deal with a lot of low educated migrant children and parents.
      Here in the Netherlands we have an increase in child poverty. Everyone screams bloody murder. When you look at the data you see reduction in child poverty with native Dutch children and increase in child poverty when it comes to migrant children, particularly asylum migrants, because there's simply more of them coming in while the normal fertility rate has plummeted.

    • @lilypadkayaker
      @lilypadkayaker Před 2 měsíci

      Maybe the incumbent can use the economic downturn as a legit excuse to cut off social welfare, so the unwanted people can migrate elsewhere, then we don’t even have to talk about the “immigration issue”?

    • @user-tq9vk4vt5p
      @user-tq9vk4vt5p Před 2 měsíci +3

      Good description! And not to forget that alle the Nordic Countrys has also helped with a lot refugees from Ukraine! Sweden has also a big export industry so the future are bright there! Looks better than in Germany where the leader of SPD Scholz more act like a slow turtle!

  • @k.j.hulander2204
    @k.j.hulander2204 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Household addiction to low interest rates is the issue. Industry is doing well and sectors outside of construction aren’t hurting. True to form for Sweden, citizens have to bear the burden for poor policy-in this case fiscal policy. That being said, unlike most of Europe, Sweden didn’t really suffer from the financial crisis of 2008 so things have been going very well for a long time, the economy was overheated and this cool-down might be good in the long run.

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      Imdustry and other sectors are not doing fine. They are suffering the low value of the swedish crown. The only thing realy prospering in sweden now is the defence industry.

    • @RoyalLegend1000
      @RoyalLegend1000 Před 2 měsíci

      yeah, but that's mostly because Sweden blame immigrants for everything, stopped nuclear power and this unhealthy loons, not to mention the privatising of healthcare and schools@@user-gd1od5cs1v

    • @Halesnaxlors
      @Halesnaxlors Před 2 měsíci

      Well, why do you think that addiction exists? That's just a symptom of a housing bubble that has been growing since the early 90s. Nobody could afford to live in the city without those low interest loans. If only real estate speculators and the ultra rich can afford to live there, who's going to make their coffee/clean their office/etc? Without a middle class, a city dies.
      Even engineers have a hard time affording housing within commute distance of their workplace these days.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      @@Halesnaxlors Housing prices looked normal when cheap, easy loans were available to pay for them. Not taking a loan to pay was the bad choice. Not when you believe you can both live in your house without the cost of rent and eventually sell your house at a profit later in life.
      Even going back to what was "normal" interest for most of the 20th century is more expensive than paying nothing.
      Right now I don't like the growing discrepancy in interest. Our company pays 8-10% interest to the bank, the bank pays 2-3% interest back to savings and in the middle the bank pays out a divident.

  • @MazzaEliLi7406
    @MazzaEliLi7406 Před měsícem

    Thank you.

  • @neotropos
    @neotropos Před 2 měsíci +2

    But I thought they had one million new doctors and engineers? Can't understand why their economy's not doing brilliantly!

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      Does that mean us who aren't doctors and engineers are useless? I would like to see what all those engineers and finance people do when they're forced to clean their own toilets at work and wipe their own elderly.

    • @neotropos
      @neotropos Před 2 měsíci

      @@SusCalvin try to understand that I was using hyperbole to try to make a point

  • @xyz-uw3ps
    @xyz-uw3ps Před 2 měsíci +9

    Gee, I wonder who's doing all that crime in Sweden.

    • @ansumanc
      @ansumanc Před 2 měsíci

      White swedes

    • @Swingmesideways
      @Swingmesideways Před 2 měsíci

      Just swedes...😂 ... only blue Eyed peoples with white skin, if you say something else you get cancelled..😂

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      The police announced that they made the revolutionary discovery that task forces might work. But criticism of the police is still taboo.

  • @MarioLanzas.
    @MarioLanzas. Před 2 měsíci +39

    the privatization of what should be social services never works in the long run for a country

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci +11

      It sure works for the businesses though. They are sold at low cost (for politcal reasons) and if they fail they are saved (for political reasons, we do need schools an dhealthcare etc).

    • @MarioLanzas.
      @MarioLanzas. Před měsícem

      @@PMMagronot everything has to be a business. that's the problem of brainrotted capitalists. they see everything as a business. they are incapable of seeing any other kind of value that is not monetary. sad. extremely sad

  • @LeonClaesson
    @LeonClaesson Před 2 měsíci +9

    I think that it is important to mention that the privatization was greatly expanded during the social democratic government in the 90s

    • @cubismo85
      @cubismo85 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Not really. Even tho the privatization continued after Göran Persson created his first cabinet, it all started to really get out of hand first after the right wing "Alliance" took power in 2006 with Fredrik Reinfeldt as prime minister. Since 2006 we have had several state-owned entreprises sold out to the private sector for a lousy cheap price, for instance vin&sprit, apoteket, telia, nuon etc.

    • @LeonClaesson
      @LeonClaesson Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@cubismo85 yes it is true that the allience privitized like crazy but the fact that the social democrats supported the privitization still remains.

    • @svenkaahedgerg3425
      @svenkaahedgerg3425 Před 2 měsíci

      True. Greed and the belief in a self regulating liberal market started already then and have been kept alive, despite being the obvious cause of the collapsing economy.

  • @tjadams8
    @tjadams8 Před 2 měsíci +29

    How could high crime/firearm deaths be a result of "privatizing the welfare state?" I don't see how the two coincide, I don't guess. "The state stopped paying for metro cards & that causes people to go out and start shooting each other?" I'm struggling to understand.

    • @nrm224
      @nrm224 Před 2 měsíci +1

      TLDR really wants to blame the Right for everything.

    • @TheRanguna
      @TheRanguna Před 2 měsíci +8

      People don't have money to buy their metro card and decide to jump the gate or steal a car.
      People have to spend a lot of money on health and decide to rob a store for food.
      One thing about the other side of the criticsm is blaming crime on emigrants. People say the same in Portugal, but the majority of the crimes are done by Portuguese people. It's still possible that it's cause by emigrants though, emigrantes come into the nation, take jobs at lower rates, which causes the job market to decrease (increasing national unemployment rate) and starting a generalised decrease in salaries, which leads to people not having enough money for food and start stealing.
      Both points are difficult to prove.

    • @Cicero_de_fato
      @Cicero_de_fato Před 2 měsíci +10

      Reason and logic is not required for being a socialist/communist.

    • @TheRanguna
      @TheRanguna Před 2 měsíci +10

      @@Cicero_de_fato such a sad, negative and information-lacking comment

    • @LathaMate1
      @LathaMate1 Před 2 měsíci

      TLDR always refuse to portray immigration in any kind of negative way, no matter the situation or story they will never say it how it is when it comes to immigrants in Europe.

  • @vincent6058
    @vincent6058 Před 2 měsíci +33

    Weird, I was told importing millions of migrants from undeveloped countries would make our economy boom.

    • @narki86
      @narki86 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Det blir en vinst lite längre fram 😂

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci +4

      Our economical problem is mainly debt private debt from buying housing. Not really connected to immigration.
      But it is kind of teh same mindset. if I can handle debt why not borrow 5 million. If we can handle immigartion why not double up. At soem point it risks tipping over ...

    • @bunnystrasse
      @bunnystrasse Před 2 měsíci

      Muslims

    • @adrianrodgon3485
      @adrianrodgon3485 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@PMMagro Debt can be solved eventually. Immigration and its effects are not just permanent, but will grow with each generation. Putting at the same level an economic temporary circumstance with the destruction of our societies is just perverse.

    • @mistermood4164
      @mistermood4164 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@adrianrodgon3485 Immigration can be solved simply put an cap on the total number of immigrants coming in or allow those will certain skillsets to come.

  • @nigelthomas7816
    @nigelthomas7816 Před 2 měsíci +10

    Immigration has been a problem that has resulted in these rise of gang related crimes in Sweden. We are seeing similar incidents in the UK, Ireland, France, Belgian, Germany and Netherlands too,but not in Poland. We are also seeing the cost of living is affecting all of Europe with sky prices in food, utilities and fuel, this is not just confined to the UK and the affects of Brexit as some europhiles would want you to believe. COVID and the war in Ukraine have played an important part in all this unfolding in recent years, we are seeing a change in Europe and else where in the world from left wing liberal governments to right wing governments. People want change, politicians all over need to start listening to the majority and not to the media circus and minority groups at present.

    • @MrDintub
      @MrDintub Před 2 měsíci +3

      Immigration isn't the problem. Failed integration is.

    • @muj970
      @muj970 Před 2 měsíci

      @@MrDintub Giving visas to immigrants who refuse to integrate is the failure of immigration first.

    • @gennarodivincenzo3560
      @gennarodivincenzo3560 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yet in Spain integration has worked very well. Evidently it is a problem of Sweden which is unable to transform these people into contributors to society

    • @MrDintub
      @MrDintub Před 2 měsíci

      @@gennarodivincenzo3560 sweden has accepted more immigrants than it has capacity to integrate into society.

  • @Theowest
    @Theowest Před 2 měsíci

    6:03 hey that's the street I grew up on!

    • @Theowest
      @Theowest Před 2 měsíci

      can't believe how fucked up how things have become. we were one of the most peaceful countries in the world to the complete opposite. like what the fuck man

  • @youngwt1
    @youngwt1 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Is there anywhere at the moment that isn’t doing bad economically?

    • @CarlMarxPunk
      @CarlMarxPunk Před 2 měsíci +5

      Mexico.

    • @IhaveBigFeet
      @IhaveBigFeet Před 2 měsíci

      Poland expects a GDP growth of close to 3% this year, and wages have gone up quite a bit.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy Před 2 měsíci +1

      From my point of view most counties are suffering from the same problem, only difference some are suffering more than others.
      I´m from Portugal we suffer from low wages (minimum is 820euros month),housing crisis,high cost of living, destruction of public sectors, business don´t invest in tech besides perhaps the tourism sector that only creates bad paying jobs ect,

    • @jontalbot1
      @jontalbot1 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Guyana, Macao, Libya, Mozambique to name a few. Most national economies around the world are growing

    • @CarlMarxPunk
      @CarlMarxPunk Před 2 měsíci

      @@jontalbot1 The further you are from the Europe-Middle east shit show, the better you are it seems.

  • @Peter-je6td
    @Peter-je6td Před 2 měsíci +38

    Yea 25% of the population is not Swedish and on welfare no correlation whatsoever

    • @DinKompis
      @DinKompis Před 2 měsíci

      technically 100% of the population is on welfare.

    • @Kiii33333222
      @Kiii33333222 Před 2 měsíci +7

      It is highly relevant in terms of school grades and unemployment and productivity. Population grows but not human capital. This doesnt mean swedish people are getting poorer or more uneducated or less innovative as statistics suggest at first glance (at least not ethnically swedes), it only means that that low skilled population is growing faster than the productive ones and this puts an extra burden on the welfare system.

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@Kiii33333222productivity is what is killing the west actually
      But go on, yap about it...

  • @joeschmoe3665
    @joeschmoe3665 Před 2 měsíci

    I don't even know why we have fleeting interest rates on real estate mortages it just seem to destabilize the economy and benefit the banks

  • @Mrsmcchiggins
    @Mrsmcchiggins Před 2 měsíci +1

    Paying for the mass immigration where the majority is unemployed and bring crime is a huge reason why Sweden is suffering. Also, the fact that a large percentage is barely speaking Swedish is a reason why kids are struggling in school.

  • @viktorfunk1819
    @viktorfunk1819 Před 2 měsíci +43

    Sweden's national bank is called Riksbanken, not Riksbank 😁
    Riksbank means 'national bank'. Riksbanken means _'the_ national bank'.

    • @carstengrooten3686
      @carstengrooten3686 Před 2 měsíci +1

      How do you make it plural? In Dutch and German we use -en for that but I assume that "the banks" does not translate into bankenen

    • @idratherbewithmycatrightnow
      @idratherbewithmycatrightnow Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@carstengrooten3686bank = bank, banken = the bank, banker = banks, bankerna = the banks

    • @williamw4643
      @williamw4643 Před 2 měsíci +9

      @@carstengrooten3686er, Riksbank-er.

    • @yassinsuleiman655
      @yassinsuleiman655 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Use the suffix -er, -or, -ar for general plural and for specific plural, like for example "the banks" we use -orna, -erna and -arna. Someone tell me if I missed anything (not a linguist).​
      @carstengrooten3686

    • @nicolassoderberg9477
      @nicolassoderberg9477 Před 2 měsíci

      @@carstengrooten3686the banks - bankerna

  • @jonsnow9762
    @jonsnow9762 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Sweden is regressing to the GDP of a Middle Eastern country

    • @Doazon
      @Doazon Před měsícem

      I mean. That doesn'tseem that bad.. Qatar and UAE are the 4th and 5th richest countries in the world.

    • @jonsnow9762
      @jonsnow9762 Před měsícem

      @@Doazon good for Sweden I guess, bring in more Muslims

    • @petrilio
      @petrilio Před měsícem

      No, but ethnically is become one.

  • @yagoa
    @yagoa Před 2 měsíci

    this is the opposite of the truth, I am a Swede...
    an employed plumber pays about 90% taxes and fees from invoice to food on the table...

  • @Helix_Nova
    @Helix_Nova Před měsícem

    Neither, because you will not find the data, due to the worng way of measuring.

  • @ahmadizzuddin
    @ahmadizzuddin Před 2 měsíci +3

    tf you mean what ever the cause, literally just mentioned people have less money. Also so good right, personally government debt has crushed me and my family. Don't mind the gangsters outside who turned to crime because of poor education and money.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      The financial structure of the gangs looks very top-heavy. The dudes on the street work for chump money as some clique sits in Spain managing the main routes.

  • @verdtre4573
    @verdtre4573 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I cant find anything about Swedens "welfare privatization" or what "brain business sector" means. How do i find more about those topics?

    • @vohkaru131
      @vohkaru131 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The welfare privatization involved making contracts with private companies, basically paying them to run the operation so that the state/provincial/local government didn't have to. This lead to schools and caretaking facilities where operational costs were kept at a minimum so that the owners could pocket as much money as possible. Great for the business people, not great for everybody else.
      No idea what he meant by 'brain business sector'. It does not seem to be a generally used term.

    • @verdtre4573
      @verdtre4573 Před 2 měsíci

      @@vohkaru131 I see. Thanks!

    • @martynas8448
      @martynas8448 Před 2 měsíci

      my guess would be that it refers to higher education work, similarly to how "brain drain" refers to highly skilled employees of one country leaving for another country@@vohkaru131

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      Brain bussines sector ought to be jobs involving everything not involving manual labour. For exampel the gaming industri, research produkt development etc.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      @@vohkaru131 You could leave your old job as a municipal politician, buy the municipal hospice building as a private landlord, rent it back to your old collegues still in the muncipality or your replacements and get praised as a prime example of market liberalism in the finance press.

  • @markuserikssen
    @markuserikssen Před 2 měsíci

    One other factor is that the rents (both public market and social housing) have gone up a lot over the last few years, and there is no end in sight. I rented a 40 m2 apartment for 1.150 euro's between 2016-2020. That same apartment now costs 1.600+ euro's (calculated from SEK). As a single person, you need a very good salary to be able to afford this. Even for couples it's quite expensive. Many of my friends are struggling with the high rents, and as a result they spend less money on going out for dinner, going out for drinks, buying new furniture, etc. And due to inflation, food and other things have also become very expensive. That all together also slows down the economy. Besides that, now that money has become a bigger stress factor and bigger apartments have become priceless, younger people put off having children, especially those living in the big cities. That will also have a big impact on the economy in the future. I hope Sweden manages to get back to growth soon. It's still a fantastic country.

    • @mertviyelf
      @mertviyelf Před 2 měsíci

      If it's not a secret, in which area the cost of an apartment is so high for 40 square meters. m.?

    • @markuserikssen
      @markuserikssen Před 2 měsíci

      @@mertviyelf Around Alvik/Traneberg/Ulfsunda. I also see apartments going for 18.000+ in this area. Crazy.

  • @JDSileo
    @JDSileo Před 2 měsíci

    If we keep designing and testing robots that can build themselves, then money and debt become pointless.

  • @henrybn14ar
    @henrybn14ar Před 2 měsíci +6

    Sweden's economy has been taxed to death for decades. Honest work is punished. The property tax was heavily capped, pumping up the housing bubble.
    Large scale migration has been catastrophic for education, crime, employment, housing and social cohesion.

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      Some logical problems with your reasoning. First, how does lower property taxes pump upp the house bubble. IMO the thing pumping up house prices has been the extremely low interest rates making it easy for people to pay almost anything for houses. The property taxes only playes a minor part of that problem. Secondly, blaming imigrants for all those problems is just silly. The biggest problem with education is the shift to letting private companys start schools and fund it with taxmoney without regulating profit, teacher qualifications and more. This has lead to schools handpicking students that gives the most profit and cutting down on teachers and facilitys for students all in the name of making profit. This will probably not change in the near future since whe have a minister of schooling that have close ties with the companys running those schools. The crime rate in Sweden has actualy declined over the last decades inspite of what it looks like when you watch the news. Yes there have been an increase with gang problems but that IMO is more a result of downfunding the police and cutting down on social services. Regarding unemployment the biggest problem is not imigrants. In 1994 there was about 11 % unemployed people in sweden and now we have about 8 %. It's simpel to blame immigrants but o so wrong. If the immigrants was such a big problem we would have much higher numbers then we have.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      M lowers the tax, and SAP does not roll back tax cuts. I have been given round after round of tax breaks. It's like M tries to drag SAP from 1970 out of the grave and debate them.

  • @mikael.wilhelm
    @mikael.wilhelm Před 2 měsíci +17

    Sweden had 8 million people in 1970, today it has 10.4 million. Meanwhile, the birth rate has remained slightly below replacement during the entire time period, so where are all the new "Swedes" coming from? The answer is of course the Middle East and Africa. And a very large proportion of the new "Swedes" are permanently on welfare, for the plain and simple reason that Sweden has an advanced economy with very few jobs suitable for uneducated people. (In fact, even highly educated immigrants have a hard time getting a job because Sweden is a very closed system socially speaking, and most job positions are given to friends of a friend.)
    To the surprise of absolutely no-one outside of the Swedish Social Democrat party, adding two million dependents to the social welfare system has drawn Sweden's economy into the shitter. Then we got gang criminality and "honor" killings and all the other fun stuff to deal with as the cherry on top.
    But even so, Sweden is still a very safe and prosperous place to live (as long as you stay out of the no-go-zones, of course).

    • @ShienChannel
      @ShienChannel Před 2 měsíci +3

      The new engineers dont produce the same gdp as the old one :(

    • @mistermood4164
      @mistermood4164 Před 2 měsíci

      thats bullshit the majority of the foreign born population in Sweden is from other European countries.

    • @ryboi1337
      @ryboi1337 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@ShienChannel*new peaceful doctors

    • @AleskyMaxomovishPeshkov
      @AleskyMaxomovishPeshkov Před 2 měsíci

      Yeah, isn't Sweden going to protect it's human artists and talent from being replaced by A.I.?

  • @eliteplier
    @eliteplier Před 2 měsíci +1

    Im going to help Sweden by buying more swedish cinnamon rolls and furniture from Ikea
    🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪

  • @simoneskildelusua7764
    @simoneskildelusua7764 Před 2 měsíci

    Well. There's always been bold people.

  • @TechnoLion1
    @TechnoLion1 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Everyone knows why the country is like this. You dont need to be a rocket scientist to understand what has changed in the recent decades.

    • @veloxic
      @veloxic Před 2 měsíci +5

      Privatisation of state assets?

    • @ciandoyle3315
      @ciandoyle3315 Před 2 měsíci +7

      the prioritisation of the welfare of non swedes over actual swedes@@veloxic

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 2 měsíci

      @@veloxic Really?

  • @bigmini2870
    @bigmini2870 Před 2 měsíci +17

    I still feel like Immigration is not talked about enough because the people who usually do have a bias against immigrants, but the simple fact of the matter is that the Swedish Immigration Experiment did not work. Whether that be due to failed assimilation practices by the government, whether too lax of a social welfare system, whether just a clash of cultures. These things all matter even if we don't want them to. You can't add 15% more people to your functioning society, give them all welfare and housing while not allowing them to work and expect things to go well.

    • @edanarator7716
      @edanarator7716 Před 2 měsíci +3

      But how does that lead to Sweden's economic situation? I see tons of people talking about "muh immigrants" in this comment section without actually explaining how they relate to or cause Sweden's economic issues

    • @bigmini2870
      @bigmini2870 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@edanarator7716 Well the whole idea of immigration was first to refill the aging working population of Sweden through immigration. The government then completely opened it's borders to anybody to come in, not just those seeking professional migration. Couple that with immigrants not being granted working rights and a very high paying welfare system, you have a massive group in your society who are made a burden on the society through no fault of their own. That creates assimilation issues, combined with lack of opportunities for life improvement, you get radicalization and a hike of crime and gang activity.

    • @Bleilock1
      @Bleilock1 Před 2 měsíci

      How was it lax social welfare system if sweeden cut it heavily in last 30 years... dafuq?

    • @tpower1912
      @tpower1912 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@edanarator7716 Because Sweden was rich because it was a country composed of Swedes. Bringing in Somalians will only make the country more like Somalia.

    • @user-gd1od5cs1v
      @user-gd1od5cs1v Před 2 měsíci

      The idea of immigrants geting loads of money is wrong. The grant is 71 Swedish crowns per day and has been the same since 1994. This is suposed to be for food, clothes, medical treatments and so on. I shure would have a hard time making a living with that kind of money. Also every study made concludes that the imigration in Sweden have a positiv effect on the Swedish economy.

  • @stefan.astrand
    @stefan.astrand Před 2 měsíci

    Should have mentioned the weak currency. Of all the current problems I think this is what explains the current state of the economy best.

  • @tikarimiekka8048
    @tikarimiekka8048 Před měsícem

    As a spaniard, while not exactly happy about this, I cannot deny certain level of satisfaction. Sweden successive governments in the last 25 years have been some of the most vocals regarding how Southern Europe is "inefficient and lazy", and constantly telling us how we should manage our economy and many of ours affairs.
    In particular I was enraged how a country which have 0 borders or wasn't even close to any immigrants origin country (should it be African, Asian or Eastern European) wanted to tell (and even show and demonstrate) how we italians, portugueses, greeks and spanish should manage immigration crisis. How is that working for you, Sweden?
    Disclaimer: I have absolutely nothing against the swedes in general. Every one of you I have ever met have been a very polite and friendly individual, and I really like your country and culture. Is your governments with their "Hollier than thou" attitude towards southern europeans that I despise. I'm actually really sad that you people are having a bad time due to the mismanagement of those idiots.

  • @treaser2
    @treaser2 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Hahaha no mention of the elephant in the room? Its an imported problem, our country is bleeding

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      Immigrants did not set up a system where former politicans from M and SAP can buy old municipal buildings and rent them back to their old municipality.
      The bank takes 8-10% interest on our company's loans and pays back 2-3% interest on savings, but the dude sitting outside the store begging is the real threat.

    • @xyz-uw3ps
      @xyz-uw3ps Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's TLDR. I'm surprised they haven't moved their headquarters to Gaza yet.

  • @ayoCC
    @ayoCC Před 2 měsíci +11

    raising interest rates is like sending a nuke to resolve an issue.
    How is there not a more pinpoint way to affect inflation in certain areas.
    Like especially housing costs need to stay stable, it's one of the most basic needs.

    • @pkhaloobonaccio9883
      @pkhaloobonaccio9883 Před 2 měsíci +3

      because economics is not an exact science , there are big dilemma .
      there are many alternatives that could possible still crash the economy .
      India at one point decided to ban rs 2000 banknotes , the system crashed .
      Our govt approach is by giving more money to the inflation (does not hurt in the short but will in the long ). Country's currency has devaluated some 80% since 2002 because of this. (The interest rate differential makes that your currency devaluates against a country with higher interest rates because all money leaves ur country for the foreign country ).
      You may look at fiscal policies (reducing income) but it is going to destroy your GDP.
      You can go supply side (increase bureaucracy to make business more difficult to set up) not only supply economics is not guaranteed , it takes a lot of time.
      Therefore your best bet is monetary policies

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 2 měsíci

      It's actually very simple. Simply cut down on government spending and only print money that is represented by real resources.

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Před 2 měsíci

      @@YeeLeeHaw the resources part is not correct a free and fair country is better off with a currency they can print and destroy at will.
      It's an important tool to soft land a crash.
      Money supply needs to be increased whenever the economy has not reached it's full potential, meaning it still can produce services even more efficiently, and provide even more demand.
      In that case you'll have deflationary pressure, when you want inflation because you want people to not save their money, but instead buy capital goods as soon as possible... Things that make money, like factory machines, or hiring developers.
      Turning money into real benefits, real work.
      Gold itself also is not the be all end all. It would be worthless if people didn't desire it for luxury or electronics.
      But it can't be devalued over time by a government. So rich people can sit on it for generations, while bank notes will lose basically all their worth in 100 years, which encourages purchasing sooner, which will likely go to someone who will again need to buy something. It's harder to soft land a gold crash than a dollar crash

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 2 měsíci

      @@ayoCC If you disagree with my point you don't understand economics, no offense.

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 2 měsíci

      @@ayoCC It's sad to see that so many have are still brainwashed to this level, thinking it's good that the government overspends their money supply and print more fiat money.

  • @JH-lo9ut
    @JH-lo9ut Před 2 měsíci +1

    Sweden went through a period of intense privatization of public housing and public companies during the two decades after the millennium.
    The right-wing coalition under prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt (2006-2014) employed an agressive neo-liberal financial policy with some pretty wild reforms. This was made to invigorate the Swedish economy, under the catch phrase "freedom of choise". This was a Raegan/Thatcheresque reform fest, going further than either of the two neo-lib deieties, and well after it was clear to most ecpnomists that wealth, in fact did not trickle down all that much.
    Those lucky swedes who could capitalize on these reforms ( notably, including mrs. Reinfelt) could make enormous profits. Astronomic sums worth of public housing, state-owned companies, health clinics, and even public schools were sold off at a bargain.
    The earnings were re-invested for the benefit of the public... No.
    Just kidding. It was spent on tax cuts.
    The upper and middle classes did benefit from these policies. Those lucky enough to buy at a bargain, and those who could increase the value of their homes.
    Mortgages were cheap, and home-owners were encouraged, through tax refunds, to make renovations and improvements to their properties.
    The interest you pay on your mortgage was tax-deductible, and with no mandatory payments and an interest rate close to zero, it was just a faucet of free money for anyone owning property.
    If you didn't own a home, if you were unable to work, if you didn't have money to invest, you weren't invited to the party.
    Not only that, they ate your food, borrowed your plates and left you with the dishes.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      I think M won a mandate to dismantle bit after bit of the older systems, but didn't have anything but utopian idealism to raise afterwards. SAP rarely rolls back initiaties M starts.

  • @statostheman
    @statostheman Před 2 měsíci

    Some independent studies that was made (due to the that SCB isn't that reliable) in 2022-23, that mortgages relative to Sweden's GDP was at 91.1%.

  • @oscarsandahl1611
    @oscarsandahl1611 Před 2 měsíci +36

    hej min hyra är hög :(

    • @axellofgren6130
      @axellofgren6130 Před 2 měsíci +3

      same

    • @randomhuman2595
      @randomhuman2595 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Swedish looks similar to German

    • @zwojack7285
      @zwojack7285 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@randomhuman2595 Not at all. As a German you can somewhat understand Belgian, Danish and Dutch. But not Swedish, Finnish or Norwegian.

    • @dragon12234
      @dragon12234 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@zwojack7285 Swedish and German does belong to the same language family, but did diverge over a thousand years ago. So they are closer to each other than to the Romance languages

    • @oscarsandahl1611
      @oscarsandahl1611 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@zwojack7285 I couldn't understand german if my life depended on it. But love germany

  • @kjetil9992
    @kjetil9992 Před 2 měsíci +6

    You should have included the currency value, since 2008 it has decrease about 50
    % against the dollar. Since most of the goods are imported the inflation increase. Same situation as in Norway

    • @chuckwood3426
      @chuckwood3426 Před 2 měsíci

      No, not really. When I last visited the states in 2005 the dollar costed about 8 krona. Today it cost about 10 krona, so it has lost about 25% of its value in 19 years.

    • @kjetil9992
      @kjetil9992 Před 2 měsíci

      @@chuckwood3426 10 of June 2008 one dollar had a value of 5.92krona, today it is 10.33 krona. That is a difference of 42.69%

  • @andreasv9472
    @andreasv9472 Před 2 měsíci

    no numbers on the y axis at 5:38 ??

  • @nerifterafrnam4682
    @nerifterafrnam4682 Před 2 měsíci

    Hello from Sweden, how you doing Mr Brilliant.
    There´s a crisis ????? OMG we´re doooomed, I best lock my doors/bolt the windows and shut the blinds.
    Thnx 4 the warning , geeez that came close.

  • @dorianodet8064
    @dorianodet8064 Před 2 měsíci +6

    You avoided talking about one glaring issue though

  • @circleali9967
    @circleali9967 Před 2 měsíci +12

    As a Swede… economy is really bad here 😢 you feel it in every way!

    • @bunnystrasse
      @bunnystrasse Před 2 měsíci +1

      Then why are the Immigrants still coming in ?

    • @circleali9967
      @circleali9967 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@bunnystrasse idk ask them

    • @Maztermox
      @Maztermox Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@bunnystrasse Well in 2023 was the lowest amount of asylum seekers since the 2000s apparently. The problem is more that some people stay illegally, because after 4 years you can apply for asylum again

    • @dexii754
      @dexii754 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Im doing all right 😊

    • @mosquitobight
      @mosquitobight Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@bunnystrasse Immigrants aren't looking for a better life, they are looking to escape a worse life. The world is severely overpopulated and many countries are falling into economic and political chaos. The stable wealthy countries are like the upper decks of a sinking ship. You can run there but the relief will be temporary.

  • @conman7644
    @conman7644 Před 2 měsíci

    Swedens economy broke already in the early 70's and have been in decline ever since, with constant measures to mask it by dismantling everything that can save money. The last ditch effort in this was to constantly decrease interest rates from the mid nineties and onwards.

  • @markusolofzon
    @markusolofzon Před 2 měsíci

    This is by design and the Swedish economy has seen similar dips several times. They missed this by only looking at comparisons between countries and not looking at the economical framework for the country and the financial structure and politics.

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      I'm worried about the household debt. It defines who takes the fall.
      I don't think voters anticipated fully what the private risk part of liberalization meant.

  • @InAeternumRomaMater
    @InAeternumRomaMater Před 2 měsíci +20

    As an immigrant in this beautiful country, I promise you that the problem is on immigrants.

    • @Nike-gs8ig
      @Nike-gs8ig Před 2 měsíci

      Sure, bot. Like, seriously this is getting ridiculous. We know paid bots are used to influence the west. Shame on you. We are not that stupid.

    • @Chrissy717
      @Chrissy717 Před 2 měsíci

      Migrants don't control fertility rates or the economy

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci +1

      You run the banks, housing market and currency as immigrants?

    • @InAeternumRomaMater
      @InAeternumRomaMater Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@PMMagro Believe me or not, but some have. Even as politicians, police and teachers. 50% of Swedens prisoners have immigrant background which is huge when we think that they only make 10% of the population, aka a minority. They also the ones making the gang violence. Of course there's some things that aren't due to immigration, however that's the biggest problem which needs to get solved first.

  • @Ekkinox04
    @Ekkinox04 Před 2 měsíci +7

    "Gang violence"
    Disconnected from reality

    • @SusCalvin
      @SusCalvin Před 2 měsíci

      It's still taboo to debate the police.

  • @user-xi8qm3up4z
    @user-xi8qm3up4z Před 2 měsíci +1

    A bad year 2024 but according to the forecast from Swedbank Sweden will go from "Trash to triumph" with higher growth than both EU and USA (3% compared to 1,3 and 1,7).The reason is rapidly falling inflation and interest rates.

  • @sylvaintaif8128
    @sylvaintaif8128 Před 2 měsíci

    I was wondering why Mark Rutte was appearing in a video about Swedish government.
    Silly me 😆

  • @gatopardoantico5657
    @gatopardoantico5657 Před 2 měsíci +3

    also homicide rate is more representative statistic than firearm attacks, using the latter may seem like cherry picking to prove a point, just like a debate class.

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci

      It is part of teh racsist agenda. As we have many immigrants it MUST be therefore wqe have many shootings. Don't mention overall crime rates are the same (it does not suport the theory).