XM levert geen diensten aan inwoners van de Verenigde Staten.

As Europe struggles to cut debt, Sweden eyes more spending



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>ANALYSIS-As Europe struggles to cut debt, Sweden eyes more spending</title></head><body>

By Simon Johnson

STOCKHOLM, May 29 (Reuters) -While much of Europe faces tough choices about how to cut budgets to bring down soaring debt, thrifty Sweden has a more enviable dilemma: how to use its strong public finances to face up to the mounting challenges ahead.

Decades of prudence have left Sweden with public finances the envy of the continent, prompting a debate about whether strict budget rules - credited with rescuing Sweden after a domestic financial crisis in the early 1990s - can be loosened.

Back then, the government slashed spending by around 8% of GDP and increased taxes after a real estate bubble burst. The cost was heavy: 200,000 public sector job cuts as the welfare state was downsized and the economy shrank three years in a row.

Memories of that pain have kept finance ministers' budgets in check ever since - to the point that the question now is whether the Nordic country needs to start loosening its belt.

With debt now around 30% of GDP - the average in Europe is around 90% - calls are increasing for a rethink to support a "green" industrial revolution that could be held back by a lack of clean electricity, housing and poor roads and railways.

"If we don't do it now, we won't just miss out on being at the cutting edge of green industrial development," Fredrik Lundh Sammeli, an oppositionSocial Democrat member of parliament, said.

"It will be a threat to ... Sweden as an industrial nation."

A government commission due to report this autumn is looking at whether to ease the current budget surplus target of 0.33% of GDP to free up extra cash.

Even the International Monetary Fund, a devotee of fiscal probity, said in its March report on Sweden a "small deviation" from the surplus target would help public investment and social spending needs.

Few doubt that more investment would be welcome.

Some of the 200 billion Swedish crowns ($19 billion) of new private investment planned in the far north of Sweden - enough to boost GDP by 2-3% - is at risk if the government doesn't stump up 60-80 billion crowns for infrastructure, a report in May by consultants McKinsey said.

Steel firm SSAB's planned fossil-free plant in Lulea, Norbotten will reduce the nation's total CO2 emissions by 7%.

For iron ore miner LKAB, the choice is between planning for fossil-free production or "planning for a shutdown", Niklas Johansson, head of communications, said.


MUCH TO DO

Other priorities are stacking up.

The IMF said more money was needed in education, training, integration and to solve Sweden's housing woes. The defence budget will have to increase after joining NATO. Tougher anti-gang measures mean Sweden needs thousands of new prison places.

Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch has proposed a deficit of around 0.5% until debt reaches around 45% of GDP, boosting the budget by 50 billion crowns a year.

Debt could rise to as much as 50% of GDP, a recent government-commissioned report said.

"That would still give us a large safety margin if we were to find ourselves in a deep crisis," Lars Calmfors, Professor of Economics at Stockholm University and one of the authors, said.


IF IT AIN'T BROKE

Others - including within Sweden's governing coalition- are sceptical, both about running deficits and whether extra spending would bring the desired results.

Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson, from the pro-business Moderate Party, said income tax cuts and benefit reform would be a better way to boost tax revenues and long-term growth than watering down fiscal rules.

"Some are saying that we should have a deficit long into the future. That would just leave our debts to the next generation," she said.

There is also a risk spending would become permanent, reducing buffers to cope with a future crisis, the Debt Office has warned.

The pandemic and the recent global bout of inflation - which topped 10% in Sweden- also show why being able to call on big fiscal buffers is good.

"It saved companies, it saved jobs and it meant we could bounce back quickly," Nordea chief economist Annika Winsth said.

Several European nations are facing painful budget cuts having allowed deficits and debt levels to surge in recent years - a fate Sweden is anxious not to experience again.

"I believe that we will probably end up with a balanced-budget target," said Mattias Persson, chief economist at Swedbank, an outcome that would increase spending from current levels.

"But we can't just pour out money on things that won't generate value for future generations," he said.


($1 = 10.5978 Swedish crowns)


Even less risky than Germany https://reut.rs/4akUT4K

Sweden's public debt burden is one of the lowest among developed nations https://reut.rs/3UDgpMe


Reporting by Simon Johnson; editing by Mark John and Toby Chopra

</body></html>

Disclaimer: De entiteiten van de XM Group bieden diensten en toegang tot ons online handelsplatform op basis van uitsluitend-uitvoering, waardoor een persoon de beschikbare content op of via de website kan bekijken en/of gebruiken, zonder dat dit is bedoeld voor wijziging of uitbreiding. Dergelijk(e) toegang en gebruik vallen onder: (i) de algemene voorwaarden; (ii) risicowaarschuwingen; en de (iii) volledige disclaimer. Dergelijke content wordt daarom alleen aangeboden als algemene informatie. Wees u er daarnaast vooral van bewust dat de inhoud op ons online handelsplatform geen verzoek of aanbieding omvat om transacties op de financiële markten uit te voeren. Het beleggen op welke financiële markt dan ook vormt een aanzienlijk risico voor uw vermogen.

Alle materialen die op ons online handelsplatform worden gepubliceerd zijn bedoeld voor educatieve/informatieve doeleinden en omvatten geen – en moeten niet worden beschouwd als het bevatten van – financieel, vermogensbelastings- of handelsadvies en aanbevelingen, of een overzicht van onze handelsprijzen, of een aanbod of aanvraag van een transactie in financiële instrumenten of ongevraagde financiële promoties voor u.

Alle content van derden, alsmede content die is voorbereid door XM, zoals opinies, nieuws, onderzoeken, analyses, prijzen en andere informatie of koppelingen naar externe websites op deze website worden aangeboden op een 'zoals-ze-zijn'-basis, als algemene marktcommentaren, en vormen geen beleggingsadvies. Voor zover dat content wordt beschouwd als beleggingsonderzoek, moet u zich ervan bewust zijn en accepteren dat de content niet bedoeld was en niet is voorbereid in overeenstemming met de wettelijke vereisten die zijn opgesteld om de onafhankelijkheid van beleggingsonderzoek te bevorderen en als zodanig onder de geldende wetgeving en richtlijnen moet worden beschouwd als marketingcommunicatie. Zorg ervoor dat u onze Mededeling over niet-onafhankelijk beleggingsonderzoek en risicowaarschuwing in verband met de voorgaande informatie doorneemt en begrijpt; die kunt u hier lezen.

Risicowaarschuwing: Uw vermogen loopt risico. Hefboomproducten zijn mogelijk niet voor iedereen geschikt. Lees onze informatie over risico's.