Welcome to Ekonomifakta
Would you like to get a better understanding of the Swedish economy? Ekonomifakta.se helps you to gain new insights by providing you with key facts on the business climate, employment, GDPGDP:, taxes and other important areas of the Swedish economy.
This English version gives you a small sample of what is available in the Swedish version of the website, for example some facts and figures and some background on Swedish economic history.
Swedish economic history
In this section, you will find a brief introduction to approximately 150 years of Swedish economic history. During this time, Sweden developed from a poor agrarian country on the outskirts of Europe to one of the wealthiest nations in the world. The articles below describe this transition.
- 2024-09-18
Agricultural toward Industrial
In the mid-1850s, Sweden was a poor agrarian country on the periphery of Europe. 120 years later, Sweden was one of the wealthiest nations in the world. A number of important changes and reforms led Sweden into the early stages of industrialization.
- 2024-09-18
From War to the Swedish Model
Sweden participated neither in the First World War nor in the Second. Therefore, Sweden was in a good position to partake in the rebuilding of a war-torn Europe.
- 2024-09-18
Structural Problems and Reforms
Despite the golden decades in the 1950s and the 1960s, Sweden suffered problems originating in dysfunctions within the economy. All of these problems surfaced during the mid-1970s oil crisis.
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Learn more about the Swedish economy
- 2024-09-18
GDP per capita
The list of purchasing power adjusted GDP per capita for the OECD countries is a rough comparison of the living standards of countries. Measured this way, Sweden was the fourth richest OECD country in the 1970s.
- 2024-09-20
The Employment Rate
Compared to most other countries, Sweden has a high employment rate. One important reason for this is that women to a high degree participate in the labour force.
- 2024-09-18
Inflation rate
Inflation erodes the purchasing power of money by driving up the overall price level in an economy. One of the most widely used methods to measure the inflation rate is through the Consumer Price Index (CPI).