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MONEY

NEW FORECAST: What’s next for the Swedish economy in 2024?

Sweden’s economic downturn will bottom out in 2024 and the key interest rate will be lowered four times this year, according to a new forecast by Sweden’s National Institute of Economic Research (NIER).

NEW FORECAST: What's next for the Swedish economy in 2024?
Head of forecasting at NIER, Ylva Hedén Westerdahl. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Sweden’s GDP will grow by 0.8 percent this year before rising to 2.5 percent next year, according to the new forecast. However, unemployment will continue to rise, hitting 8.3 percent this year, before dropping in 2025.

The institute’s core measure of inflation, CPIF, which strips out the effect of interest rate rises, fell to 2.5 percent in February. The institute expects that it will continue to drop throughout 2024, reaching 1.2 percent by the end of the year, far below the Riksbank’s 2 percent target.

“Inflation has fallen quickly and will continue to fall throughout 2024,” NIER’s head of forecasting, Ylva Hedén Westerdahl, told a press conference. “We’ve reached a stable price level and prices are going to increase at a more normal rate from now on.” 

The institute expects the Riksbank, Sweden’s central bank, to start cutting its key interest rate – currently at 4 percent – from June, with four total decreases throughout the year, reaching 3 percent by the end of 2024 and 2.25 percent by the end of 2025.

This, along with lower interest rates, increased consumption and a rise to real wages is expected to speed economic recovery.

“The biggest risk for this forecast would be if [interest rates don’t go down], and central banks are forced to make a U-turn and keep their rates high,” Hedén Westerdahl said.

GDP fell slightly in the final quarter of last year, but is expected to rise in the first quarter of 2024. Despite this, growth will not be strong enough for the economy to start to recover until the end of the year and the country will remain in a period of low growth until 2026, the institute predicts.

Consumers have also become less pessimistic about their own finances and more positive about the future, partly due to inflation nearing the Riksbank’s 2 percent target rate.

Swedish exports are expected to start to grow again in the second quarter of this year, albeit slowly, due to weak demand from abroad – the Eurozone in particular, where growth has been weak, as well as the US, where GDP growth is expected to slow throughout the year.

Joining Nato may also have an impact on Sweden’s economy, as increased defence spending means faster growth in central government consumption throughout this year and into 2025. Local governments, on the other hand, have weak finances and will need to make cutbacks in some areas, leading to comparatively weak consumption growth in both years, and a public finance deficit next year.

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HEALTH

Swedish convenience stores to stub out sale of cigarettes

Sweden's two most well-known convenience store chains, Pressbyrån and 7-Eleven, plan to completely remove cigarettes from their shelves in the long run.

Swedish convenience stores to stub out sale of cigarettes

Reitan Convenience, the company that owns the chains, is set to phase out their sale of cigarettes and ultimately stop selling them, it said in a press statement.

“The risks of smoking tobacco are well known, both when it comes to health risks but also the impact on the environment and labour conditions in the production chain. We’re also seeing that some countries are introducing various forms of bans on smoking, for example progressive age bans,” Reitan’s CEO for the Swedish market, Anna Wallenberg, told Swedish news agency TT.

The UK and New Zealand have both spoken of introducing laws to ban young people from buying tobacco.

Just over half of the chains’ tobacco sales today comes from cigarettes, and the rest is made up of other nicotine and smoke-free products as well as snus, Sweden’s moist tobacco pouches which may be part of the reason why the use of cigarettes is dropping in Sweden.

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Reitan Convenience also said it aims to phase out the sale of products containing palm oil, a controversial oil criticised by environmental and human rights groups for causing deforestation and human rights violations in the tropics where the palms are grown.

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