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WORKING IN SWEDEN

EXPLAINED: Why Sweden’s unions are asking for a four percent real pay cut

The Swedish Trade Union Confederation in November set its starting bid in the coming salary bargaining round so low that it is effectively asking for a four percent real pay cut for its members. We explain why it is willing to do this.

EXPLAINED: Why Sweden's unions are asking for a four percent real pay cut
The headquarters of the Swedish Trade Union Confederation at Norra Bantorget in Stockholm. Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT

What’s happening? 

Next month, Sweden’s unions will start salary talks with employers as the 2023 collective bargaining round kicks off. Ahead of the negotiations, representatives of the 14 unions that are members of the Swedish Trade Union Confederation (LO) met in November at its Stockholm headquarters to agree on “the mark”, or märket, the percentage pay rise demand which will set the base for negotiations with employers. 

On November 19th, 13 of the 14 unions agreed to propose a mark of 4.4 percent, something Thomas Carlén, one of the LO economists who did the research that fed into the agreement, told The Local represents a significant real pay cut. 

“Our forecast is that the inflation rate will be very high next year, but it will also decrease from its peak in the first quarter, but on a yearly basis, this will probably lead to real wage decreases of about 5 percent, or 4 percent.” 

As well as the 4.4 percent increase, the unions also agreed to push for extra support for those earning less than 27,100 kronor a month. 

So why aren’t unions asking for compensation to match current high inflation rates? 

Unions are holding back partly to avoid fueling a so-called wage-price spiral, where nominal wage increases are eaten up by price rises, leaving real wages stagnant. 

“If we get wage-driven inflation, it’s going to be those on the absolutely lowest salaries who end up being the losers,” Susanna Gideonsson, LO’s President, told Swedish news agency TT at the end of December. 

She pointed to the situation in the 1970s and 1980s when Sweden’s unions fought for inflation-busting pay rises only to end up generating ever higher inflation. 

“We have tried to go that way and we have lost as a result of it,” she told TT. “Those who earn the least take the biggest hit. This is about getting real, long-term pay increases.”  

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What system does the Swedish Trade Union Confederation use to set wages? 

According to Carlén, after the high inflation of the 1970s and 1980s, LO brought in a new system in 1997, which sets the “mark” for negotiations with reference to  the Swedish Central Bank’s inflation target of 2 percent, rather than with reference to the actual level of price rises in the economy.  

“We have this model, as we love to say in Sweden,” he said.  “And in this model we normally calculate the room for wage increases as the inflation target, plus productivity growth, and that will be maybe three and a half percent.”

The unions also benchmark wages in Sweden against those in competitor countries, keeping a particularly close eye on wage developments in Germany, to make sure that Swedish exporters remain competitive. 

Between 2010 and 2020, when monthly consumer price inflation in Sweden was frequently under 1 percent and rarely rose above 2 percent, this model provided most workers in the country with more generous pay rises than their counterparts in many other European countries. 

“That’s what we’ve been doing for 25 years and it was a good thing for the trade unions when the actual inflation rate was almost always lower than the target,” Carlén told The Local. “The business sector always said ‘no, you shouldn’t use the inflation target, you need to calculate the actual inflation rate, which was sometimes 1 percent of 1.5 percent.”

Because the unions insisted on using the inflation target then, they now want to defend the model by continuing to do so even if it means a few years of declining real wages. 

“We have decided to continue doing it this time, even if it is not the most beneficial thing for our members this time, since this model has been quite successful for 25 years,” Carlén said. “We have had higher real wage increases in Sweden than in most other countries since 1997, so we think that this model works.” 

If the unions shifted to using the real inflation rate this time around, he added, they would “risk this model for the future”. 

So what happens next? 

Industrial employers, who the unions in November agreed be the first to enter salary negotiations, at the end of December proposed a pay rise of just 2 percent, together with a one-off payment to employees of 3,000 kronor, far less than LO’s mark. Sit-down talks between industrial unions and employees will begin properly next month, with a view to setting the final agreed “mark” in April. 

Once all the central agreements have been made between the unions and the employer organisations, there will then be a second stage of negotiations between unions and individual employers, at which point salary rises generally increase a little further. 

“In the local wage negotiations you usually get some wage drift, so if the mark is set at 4.4 percent, maybe the actual wage increases will be 4.8 percent or 5 percent,” Carlén explains. “If the ‘mark’ is considered to be low, some groups on the labour market, which usually are the white collar workers, might manage to get more in local wage negotiations.” 

So will there be strikes? 

Sweden’s unions have in recent decades been much less likely to take to the picket lines than those of most other countries, but that does not mean it can’t happen. 

“We usually don’t need to go on strike that often in these wage negotiation rounds,” Carlén said. “But you never know. This time is very tricky, so we can always use the strike weapon and we will if they will not meet our demands.” 

The Swedish Transport Workers’ Union was the only one of the 14 LO member unions not to back the 4.4 percent proposal, which means they may seek a higher rise for their members, increasing the risk of a conflict with transport operators. 

In addition, Gideonsson, LO’s President, is insisting that the leaders of companies, municipalities, regional health authorities and government agencies also keep their salary rises well below the inflation rate, warning that if they fail to do so, “then we can reckon with a much more difficult collective bargaining round”. 

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WORK PERMITS

Is Sweden meeting its 30-day work permit target for high-skilled foreigners?

Three months after the Swedish Migration Agency rolled out a new system for work permits, how long are highly qualified foreign professionals having to wait for a decision?

Is Sweden meeting its 30-day work permit target for high-skilled foreigners?

More than 7,750 work permit applications have been submitted to Sweden’s Migration Agency since a new system designed to speed up waiting times for skilled workers was implemented.

The new system, rolled out on January 29th, divides workers into four different categories depending on their profession. It was introduced after complaints about long waits for both first-time and renewed work permits and promised to process the top category, “A”, within 30 days.

Category A applications are those already classified as “highly qualified” under the Standard for Swedish Classification of Occupations (SSYK), and include leadership roles, roles requiring higher university education, and roles requiring university education or equivalent.

A Migration Agency spokesperson told The Local that a total of 95 percent of complete work permit applications sent in by highly qualified workers since January 29th were processed within 30 days, with a median handling time of 14 days, according to figures from April 15th.

“Our ambition is to decide cases for highly qualified labour within 30 days – sometimes it happens that the application isn’t complete and that can make the processing time longer,” the spokesperson said.

By mid-April, the Migration Agency had processed 4,461 complete applications, 550 incomplete applications and 423 applications for permanent residency which were complete but had to wait for a decision because the applicant’s previous permit hadn’t yet expired.

Around 77 percent of incomplete applications were processed within 30 days.

A Migration Agency spokesperson told The Local that there may be various reasons why an application is incomplete, but “common mistakes” include passports lacking a signature, incorrect information about accommodation when needed, no or not enough information about the applicant’s insurances, or no statement from the trade union about working conditions.

The spokesperson also said that the four percent of complete applications that didn’t get processed within a month were delayed because of, for example, the applicant failing to visit an embassy to show their passport before the deadline, having a criminal record in Sweden that required further investigation of their application, or the security police blocking their application.

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