, PY –
pyrite, Cu –
copper, Zn –
zinc, As –
arsenic, Ag –
silver, Au –
gold, Pb –
lead, U –
uranium; in red: C –
coal, OS –
oil shale. Sweden is an export-oriented
mixed economy featuring a modern distribution system, excellent internal and external communications, and a skilled
labor force. Timber,
hydropower and iron ore constitute the resource base of an economy heavily oriented toward
foreign trade. Sweden's engineering sector accounts for 50% of output and exports. Telecommunications, the automotive industry and the pharmaceutical industries are also of great importance. Agriculture accounts for 2 percent of GDP and employment. The armaments industry has a technologically highly advanced reputation. The 20 largest Sweden-registered companies by turnover were
Volvo,
Ericsson,
Vattenfall,
Skanska,
Hennes & Mauritz,
Electrolux,
Volvo Personvagnar,
Preem,
TeliaSonera,
Sandvik,
ICA,
Atlas Copco,
Nordea,
Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget,
Scania,
Securitas,
Nordstjernan,
SKF,
ABB Norden Holding, and
Sony Mobile Communications AB. Some 4.5 million residents are working, out of which around a third have a tertiary education. GDP per hour worked is the world's 9th-highest at US$31 in 2006, compared to US$22 in Spain and US$35 in United States. The Swedish labor market has become more flexible, but it still has some widely acknowledged problems.
World Economic Forum 2012–2013 competitiveness index ranks Sweden 4th most competitive. The
Index of Economic Freedom 2012 ranks Sweden the 21st most free out of 179 countries, or 10th out of 43 European countries. Sweden ranked 9th in the IMD Competitiveness Yearbook 2008, scoring high in private sector efficiency. According to the book,
The Flight of the Creative Class, by the U.S. urban studies, Professor
Richard Florida of
University of Toronto, Sweden is ranked as having the best
creativity in Europe for business and is predicted to become a talent magnet for the world's most purposeful workers. The book compiled an index to measure the kind of creativity it claims is most useful to business – talent, technology and tolerance. Sweden's investment into
research and development stood, in 2007, at over 3.5% of GDP. This is considerably higher than that of a number of
MEDCs, including the United States, and is the largest among the OECD members. Sweden rejected the
Euro in a
referendum in 2003, and Sweden maintains its own currency, the
Swedish krona (SEK). The Swedish
Riksbankfounded in 1668 and thus making it the oldest central bank in the worldis currently focusing on price stability with its inflation target of 2%. According to
Economic Survey of Sweden 2007 by OECD, the average inflation in Sweden has been one of the lowest among European countries since the mid-1990s, largely because of deregulation and quick utilization of globalization. The largest trade flows are with Germany, United States, Norway, United Kingdom, Denmark and Finland. The Swedish economic picture has brightened significantly since the severe
recession in the early 1990s. Growth has been strong in recent years, and even though the growth in the economy slackened between 2001 and 2003, the growth rate has picked up since with an average growth rate of 3.7% in the last three years. The long-run prospects for growth remain favorable. The inflation rate is low and stable, with projections for continued low levels over the next 2–3 years. Since the mid-1990s the export sector has been booming, acting as the main engine for economic growth. Swedish exports also have proven to be surprisingly robust. A marked shift in the structure of the exports, where services, the IT industry, and telecommunications have taken over from traditional industries such as steel, paper and
pulp, has made the Swedish export sector less vulnerable to international fluctuations. However, at the same time the Swedish industry has received less money for its exports while the import prices have gone up. During the period 1995–2003 the export prices were reduced by 4% at the same time as the import prices climbed by 11%. The net effect is that the Swedish terms-of-trade fell 13%. By 2014, legislators, economists and the IMF were warning of a bubble with residential property prices soaring and the level of personal mortgage debt expanding. Household debt-to-income rose above 170% as the IMF called on legislators to consider zoning reform and other means of generating a greater supply of housing as demand was outstripping supply. By August 2014, 40% of home borrowers had interest-only loans while those that didn't were repaying principal at a rate that would take 100 years to fully repay.
Government The
government budget has improved dramatically from a record deficit of more than 12% of GDP in 1993. In the last decade, from 1998 to present, the government has run a surplus every year, except for 2003 and 2004. The surplus for 2011 is expected to be 99 billion ($15b)
kronor. The new, strict
budget process with spending ceilings set by the
Riksdag, and a
constitutional change to an independent
Central Bank, have greatly improved policy credibility. From the perspective of longer-term
fiscal sustainability, the long-awaited reform of old-age pensions entered into force in 1999. This entails a far more robust system vis-à-vis adverse
demographic and economic trends, which should keep the ratio of total pension disbursements to the aggregate wage bill close to 20% in the decades ahead. Taken together, both fiscal consolidation and pension reform have brought public finances back on a sustainable footing. Gross public debt, which jumped from 43% of GDP in 1990 to 78% in 1994, stabilised around the middle of the 1990s and started to come down again more significantly beginning in 1999. In 2000 it fell below the key level of 60% and had declined to a level of 35% of GDP as of 2010.
Companies In 2022, the sector with the highest number of companies registered in Sweden was the services sector with 457,044 companies followed by finance,
insurance, and real estate with 184,377 companies. The
construction sector is well-developed in Sweden, with significant development in the level of
sub-contracting within the industry since the 1980s. Other major companies headquartered in Sweden include
Spotify,
IKEA,
Mojang,
Volvo,
Ericsson,
H&M, and
Scandinavian Airlines. ==Economic and monetary union==