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FOOD AND DRINK

Higher cost of living forces Swedes to cut back on alcohol

The slumping economy has had a knock-on effect on Swedes' alcohol consumption, new figures show.

Higher cost of living forces Swedes to cut back on alcohol
Alcohol consumption is steadily declining in Sweden, having dropped by around 10 percent since 2014. Photo: Ari Luostarinen/SvD/TT

Alcohol consumption fell the most in nearly a decade in the Nordic country, excluding the 2020 pandemic, research showed on Friday.

Alcohol consumption among people above the age of 15 fell to 8.6 litres per capita in 2023, according to the Swedish Council for Information on Alcohol and Other Drugs (CAN).

It was down 2.7 percent from 2022, the biggest annual drop since 2014 when excluding 2020.

“This shows that the economic situation in 2023 has also influenced the buying of alcohol,” Björn Trolldal, a researcher at CAN, said in a statement.

“The depreciation of the Swedish krona and the increase in fuel prices has affected imports,” the researcher told AFP.

As a result, Swedes bought less alcohol from Germany, which accounts for 50 percent of total imports, he added.

The country’s economy shrank by 0.3 percent in 2023, one of the weakest performers in the European Union, as the central bank raised rates to battle soaring inflation.

Sweden has an alcohol distribution monopoly, meaning that apart from bars and restaurants Swedes can only buy beverages with an alcohol-level above 3.5 percent at state-run outlets called Systembolaget, and authorised retailers in rural areas.

Systembolaget accounted for around 71 percent of total consumption in 2023, up from 64.8 percent in 2019, according to the study.

Alcohol consumption is steadily declining in Sweden, having dropped by around 10 percent since 2014.

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MONEY

Sweden’s major banks cut rates on variable mortgages

The central bank's decision to lower the main interest rate on May 8th has led all four of Sweden's major banks to follow, dropping rates on variable mortgages.

Sweden's major banks cut rates on variable mortgages

In what will come as a relief for many Swedish homeowners, Sweden’s central bank announced on May 8th that it was cutting the key interest rate by 0.25 percentage points to 3.75 percent – the first cut in eight years.

Sweden’s four major banks – Nordea, Swedbank, Handelsbanken and SEB – responded by lowering rates on their variable rate mortgages by the same amount, 0.25 percentage points.

That means that Nordea’s new list rate – the maximum rate offered for new mortgages, with no discounts taken into account – will be 5.74 percent from May 10th.

Swedbank will be lowering its list rate by 0.25 percentage points to 5.69 percent, although there’s bad news, too: the bank is lowering interest rates for saving accounts by 0.20 percentage points.

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Handelsbanken’s new list rate will be the same as Swedbank’s: 5.69 percent.

“We’re continuously following these developments and are constantly adapting our offering to remain competitive in the long term,” county head of Handelsbanken Stockholm, Mikael Romert, said in a press statement.

Länsförsäkringar is also lowering its rates on variable term mortgages to 5.69 percent, a drop of 0.25 percentage points.

State-owned SBAB is not planning on lowering its rate, although product manager Lars Lindmark pointed out that the bank has lowered rates by around 30 percentage points since December last year.

“In that respect, we’ve pre-empted this announcement by the central bank,” he said. “We’ll have to see what happens. We’ll look at the interest rate market and how our competitors are reacting.”

“Having said that, further rate drops are never ruled out.”

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