SHARE
COPY LINK

JOBS

Centre Party touts new Swedish labour model

The Centre Party, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Maud Olofsson, has put itself on a collision course with Sweden's two largest parties by calling for an overhaul of the country's much vaunted labour market model.

Centre Party touts new Swedish labour model

Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, two days before the start of the party’s annual conference, Olofsson contended that Swedish labour laws are outdated and in desperate need of reform.

Current employment regulations hinder the development of new jobs, the party argues, with the Employment Protection Act (Lagen om Anställningsskydd – LAS) coming in for particular criticism.

The Centre Party advocates replacing LAS with a new “mini-LAS”. Currently, under the terms of the Act, companies with up to ten staff members are permitted to exempt a maximum of two employees from the principle of “last-in, first-out”.

The Centre Party’s proposal entails extending this principle to enable companies consisting of up to fifty people to exempt ten employees, while firms with forty members of staff could exempt eight people, and so on.

In order to make the proposal a marketable political product, the party has called for the simultaneous introduction of four new measures, two of which are aimed at wage earners and two at employers.

For employees, the party is prepared to raise unemployment benefits to 80 percent for a worker’s first three months out of a job. Furthermore, wage earners making regular contributions to a skills development account – a form of individual retraining insurance – are to be eligible for tax deductions.

Employers meanwhile are promised more flexible employment laws and lower social charges.

Olofsson admitted that the proposal would likely lead the party into a war on two fronts, as neither the Moderate Party nor the opposition Social Democrats are in favour of altering Sweden’s current labour market legislation.

“But we’re not going to change our mind just because others think differently,” she said.

In the long term, Olofsson said she would like to leave hiring and firing decisions entirely in the hands of employers with the current proposal constituting an initial step along that path. But she also insisted that the party was keen to find compromises that would appeal to groups representing both employers and employees.

“The unions have said they have a sense of insecurity. If that’s the price we have to pay for changes to LAS then we’re willing to pay it. But we’re not prepared just to raise unemployment insurance payments; the measures will all be introduced at the same time,” she said.

The Centre Party has also put forward a range of other proposals to stimulate the job market including salaries for apprentices, an extension of trial employment periods to two years and the removal of age restrictions for company start-up grants.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

WORKING IN SWEDEN

‘Reassess your cultural background’: Key tips for foreign job hunters in Sweden

Many foreigners living in Sweden want to stay in the country but struggle to find a job, despite having relevant qualifications. The Local spoke to three experts for their advice.

'Reassess your cultural background': Key tips for foreign job hunters in Sweden

One international worker who found it hard to land her first job in Sweden is Amanda Herzog, who eventually founded Intertalents in Sweden with the aim of helping other immigrants find work in the country.

Herzog originally came to Sweden to study at Jönköping University and decided to stay after graduating.

“I thought it would take three months, maybe six months to find a job, I was prepared for that,” she told The Local during a live recording of our Sweden in Focus podcast held as part of Talent Talks, an afternoon of discussions at the Stockholm Business Region offices on how to attract and retain foreign workers in Sweden.

“What happened was it took over 13 months and 800 applications to actually get a job in my industry, within marketing.”

During this time, Herzog was getting multiple interviews a month, but was not getting any further in the process, despite showing her CV to Swedish recruiters for feedback.

“They were baffled as well,” she said. “By the time I landed my dream job, I had to go outside of the typical advice and experiment, and figure out how I actually can get hired. By the time I got hired, I realised what actually works isn’t really being taught.”

‘Reassess your cultural background’

Often, those who come to Herzog for help have sent out hundreds of CVs and are unsure what their next steps should be.

“My first piece of advice is to stop for a second,” she said. “Reassess your cultural background and how it fits into Sweden.”

Herzog, for example, discovered she was interviewing in “the American way”.

In the US, when asked to tell an interviewer about yourself, you’d be expected to discuss your career history – how many people have you managed? Did sales improve while you were working there? – while Swedes are more likely to want to know about you as a person and why you want to work in a specific role for their company in particular.

“A lot of people don’t know this, so imagine all of the other cultural things that they’re doing differently that they learned in their country is normal,” Herzog adds.

“Just start with learning, because it could be that you don’t need to change very much, you are qualified, you just need to connect with the Swedish way of doing things.”

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by The Local Sweden (@thelocalsweden)

 

Networking is important

“Don’t hesitate to reach out for help and guidance,” said Laureline Vallée, an environmental engineer from France who recently found a job in Sweden after moving here nine months ago with her partner, who got a job as a postdoc at KTH Royal Institute of Technology.

“You tend to insulate yourself and consider yourself not capable, but you’re not less capable than you were in your home country, you just need to explain it to the employers.”

Another tip is to network as much as you can, Vallée said.

“Networking is really important here in Sweden, so just go for it, connect with people in the same field.”

This could be through networks like Stockholm Akademiska Forum’s Dual Career Network, which helps the accompanying partners or spouses of foreign workers find a job in Sweden, or through other connections, like neighbours, friends, or people you meet through hobbies, for example.

Make a clear profile for yourself

Another common issue is that applicants are not presenting themselves clearly to recruiters, Stockholm Akademiska Forum’s CEO, Maria Fogelström Kylberg, told The Local.

“If you’re sending 600 applications without an answer, something is wrong. We have seen many people looking for jobs working in a supermarket, and the next application is a managing director post,” she said. “You have to decide ‘who am I? What do I want to do?’, you have to profile yourself in a clear way.”

This could be editing down your CV so you’re not rejected for being overqualified, or just thinking more closely about how you present yourself to a prospective employer.

“Which of my skills are transferable? How can I be of use to this company? Not what they can do for me, but what problem can I solve with my competence?”

Job hunters should also not be afraid of applying for a job which lists Swedish as a requirement in the job description, Fogelström Kylberg said.

“Sometimes if I see an ad for a job and I have a perfect candidate in front of me, I call the company and say ‘I have a perfect candidate, but you need them to speak Swedish’, they then say ‘no, that’s not so important’. This is not so unusual at all so don’t be afraid of calling them to say ‘do I really need perfect Swedish?’”

Listen to the full interview with Maria Fogelström Kylberg, Amanda Herzog and Laureline Vallée in The Local’s Sweden in Focus Extra podcast for Membership+ subscribers.

Interview by Paul O’Mahony, article by Becky Waterton

SHOW COMMENTS