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NORWAY

Booze and butter boost Norwegians’ Swedish spending spree

Norwegians spent more than 13 billion kronor ($1.9 billion) during one-day shopping trips to Sweden last year, meaning almost 6 percent of Norway's consumer food and beverage trade has migrated to Sweden.

Booze and butter boost Norwegians' Swedish spending spree
A 2008 file image of Norwegians celebrating National Day in Stockholm

Norway’s cross-border commerce increased by nine percent to 14 billion Swedish kronor in 2011, according to figures from Norwegian statistics agency SSB, with 94 percent of the trade consisting of one-day shopping trips to Sweden.

The trend has caused concern among Norway’s business community as well as with the Norwegian state, which last year lost an estimated 3 billion Swedish kronor worth of revenues in taxes and fees.

“We’re concerned because this is a huge amount of turnover that Norwegian traders miss out on. They and their supplier are losing lots of jobs,” Thomas Angell of the Norwegian business trade association Virke Handel told Norwegian news agency NTB.

According to his estimates, Norwegian firms have lost around 10,000 jobs as a result of Norwegians taking their business to Sweden.

Just over half of Norwegians’ spending in Sweden, 52 percent, takes place in Strömstad and Svenesund in Bohuslän in southwestern Sweden.

Charlottenberg and Arvika in Värmland County, meanwhile, account for 19 percent.

The trend has even prompted the right-wing populist Fremskrittspartiet to demand a debate about the issue in the Norwegian parliament.

According to SSB’s figures, it’s not simply cheap booze that attracts Norwegians to Sweden.

And sales statistics from Swedish alcohol store monopoly Systembolaget show that turnover at stores located near the Norwegian border only increased by 0.6 percent, compared with the 9 percent overall increase in cross-border trade.

Another contributing factor may have been the Norwegian butter shortage which took place before Christmas, according to Sten Magne Berglund of the Norwegian temperance association Actis.

TT/The Local/dl

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NORWAY

Norway to send 200,000 AstraZeneca doses to Sweden and Iceland

Norway, which has suspended the use of AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine until further notice, will send 216,000 doses to Sweden and Iceland at their request, the Norwegian health ministry said Thursday.

Norway to send 200,000 AstraZeneca doses to Sweden and Iceland
Empty vials of the AstraZeneca vaccine. (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP)

“I’m happy that the vaccines we have in stock can be put to use even if the AstraZeneca vaccine has been paused in Norway,” Health Minister Bent Høie said in a statement.

The 216,000 doses, which are currently stored in Norwegian fridges, have to be used before their expiry dates in June and July.

Sweden will receive 200,000 shots and Iceland 16,000 under the expectation they will return the favour at some point. 

“If we do resume the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, we will get the doses back as soon as we ask,” Høie said.

Like neighbouring Denmark, Norway suspended the use of the AstraZeneca jab on March 11 in order to examine rare but potentially severe side effects, including blood clots.

Among the 134,000 AstraZeneca shots administered in Norway before the suspension, five cases of severe thrombosis, including three fatal ones, had been registered among relatively young people in otherwise good health. One other person died of a brain haemorrhage.

On April 15, Norway’s government ignored a recommendation from the Institute of Public Health to drop the AstraZeneca jab for good, saying it wanted more time to decide.

READ MORE: Norway delays final decision on withdrawal of AstraZeneca vaccine 

The government has therefore set up a committee of Norwegian and international experts tasked with studying all of the risks linked to the AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, which is also suspected of causing blood clots.

Both are both based on adenovirus vector technology. Denmark is the only European country to have dropped the AstraZeneca
vaccine from its vaccination campaign, and said on Tuesday it would “lend” 55,000 doses to the neighbouring German state of Schleswig-Holstein.

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