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Country profile: Sweden

Map of Sweden

Sweden's position as one of the world's most highly developed post-industrial societies looks fundamentally secure.

Unemployment is low and the economy strong. Public-private partnership is at the core of "the Swedish model", which was developed by the Social Democrats, who governed for most of the last 70 years until 2006.

Overview

This mixed economy traditionally featured centralised wage negotiations and a heavily tax-subsidised social security network. The Swedes still enjoy an advanced welfare system, and their standard of living and life expectancy are almost second to none.

Stockholm, general view
Stockholm: The capital's old town is well-preserved
The country is also a common destination for refugees and asylum seekers - immigrants make up more than 10% of its population.

Swedes voted in a referendum in 1980 to phase out nuclear power. It was nearly two decades before the first reactor was shut down in 1999. Another followed in 2005. A further 10 remain to be decommissioned.

Sweden is known throughout the world for its neutrality. This policy has led to a number of Swedish politicians taking on international roles, often mediating between conflicting groups or ideologies. With the ending of the Cold War, Sweden felt able to join the European Union in 1995 although it still declines to become a Nato member.

Sweden was one of three EU countries not to join the single European currency. In the first referendum on membership after the euro's introduction in 12 of 15 EU countries, Swedish voters rejected it by a clear majority in September 2003.

Facts

  • Full name: Kingdom of Sweden
  • Population: 9.1 million (UN, 2007)
  • Capital: Stockholm
  • Area: 449,964 sq km (173,732 sq miles)
  • Major language: Swedish
  • Major religion: Christianity
  • Life expectancy: 79 years (men), 83 years (women) (UN)
  • Monetary unit: 1 Swedish krona = 100 ore
  • Main exports: Machinery and transport equipment, paper products, chemicals
  • GNI per capita: US $46,060 (World Bank, 2007)
  • Internet domain: .se
  • International dialling code: +46

Leaders

King: Carl XVI Gustaf

Prime minister: Fredrik Reinfeldt

The Alliance for Sweden, a centre-right coalition headed by Moderate Party leader Fredrik Reinfeldt, unseated the Social Democrat Party of Goran Persson in elections in September 2006.

Fredrik Reinfeldt
Fredrik Reinfeldt's win ended a decade of Social Democrat rule

Mr Persson was one of Europe's longest-serving leaders, having spent 10 years in the job. The Social Democrats governed Sweden for much of the period since World War II.

The Alliance for Sweden has a slim seven-seat majority in the 349-seat parliament. It campaigned on a platform of streamlining the welfare state and cutting taxes, in order to create jobs.

Since becoming party leader in 2003 Mr Reinfeldt has moved the Moderates towards the political centre. He forged a four-party alliance with the Christian Democrats, the Liberals and the Centre Party. He supports Sweden's entry into Nato, provided there is cross-party support.

Born in 1965, Fredrik Reinfeldt joined his party's youth wing in 1991. He is married and has three children.

Media

Swedish audiences enjoy a wide variety of public and commercial broadcast services, though until relatively recently public TV and radio, funded by a licence fee, had a near-monopoly of the airwaves.

Public television is run by Sveriges Television (SVT). Its main competitor is TV4, a commercial station which launched in 1992. The country is home to the regional media giants Bonnier and the Modern Times Group (MTG).

Most households have cable or satellite TV and can choose from among dozens of channels. Digital terrestrial broadcasting was launched by SVT in 1999; pay-TV channels are also broadcast in the format. The government aims to complete the switch to digital TV broadcasting by 2008.

Public radio is run by Sveriges Radio. Commercial radio began in 1993, and there are nearly 100 stations. Some of them have consolidated into near-national networks.

Most Swedish households take a daily newspaper and the country is among the top consumers of newspapers in the world. Many titles have a regional readership. The government subsidises newspapers regardless of their political affiliation.

The press

Television

  • Sveriges Television (SVT) - public, operates terrestrial networks SVT 1 and SVT 2, news channel SVT24, European satellite channel SVT Europa
  • TV4 - commercial, terrestrial
  • TV3 - commercial, via satellite and cable
  • Kanal 5 - commercial, via satellite and cable
  • ZTV - commercial, via satellite and cable

Radio

  • Sveriges Radio - public, operates news and public affairs station P1, classical music station P2, youth station P3 and regionally-based news and music station P4
  • Radio Sweden International - external service run by Sveriges Radio, broadcasts in a number of languages including English
  • Rix FM - commercial, national pop music network
  • NRJ - commercial, national pop music network
  • Mix Megapol - commercial, national music network

News agency

  • TT - owned by several media groups





A GUIDE TO EUROPE

 

 

Compiled by BBC Monitoring

EUROPEAN PRESS PROFILES
 


SEE ALSO
Obituary: Ingmar Bergman
30 Jul 07 |  Entertainment
Sweden aims for oil-free economy
08 Feb 06 |  Science & Environment
Sweden's nuclear waste headache
01 Jun 05 |  Science & Environment

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