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The Rise of More Swedish Millionaires Put Sweden's Finance Chief on Edge

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The Nordic nations of Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland and Iceland have stood out as a model of economic resilience due to their cradle-to-grave social security systems, robust public finances and innovation success. Yet a key tenet of the Nordic model, equality, is now being challenged by years of extreme monetary policy that inflated asset prices and, more recently, the jump in unemployment in the wake of Covid-19.

Andersson’s warning adds to concerns across the globe as gains in asset prices -- propped up by endless waves of emergency central-bank support -- favor the wealthy. Meanwhile, the services industry has bled mainly low-paying jobs held by younger workers, most of whom don’t own assets such as stocks or property.


Taxing Wealth www.boldcashersbank.com

Andersson is part of a Social Democrat-led coalition that has signaled it might use taxes as a way to improve equality. Indeed, “a widening wealth gap has already fueled some calls for action on taxes,” Johanna Jeansson of Bloomberg Economics said. But the options may be limited.

Raising Sweden’s property tax is an idea that’s “liked by economists, but would be very unpopular among the general Swedish population,” Jeansson said.

Sweden scrapped its wealth tax in 2007, amid evidence it didn’t work as intended. And Jeansson notes that average taxation of capital income “is already higher” than among Sweden’s European peers. At the same time, the government last year abandoned a tax targeting the highest income earners, amid pressure from its coalition partners. What’s more, the extra levy didn’t provide much additional revenue.

The key challenge, Jeansson says, is ensuring that “plenty of jobs are created.”

Which Letter?

At the start of the pandemic, economists were predicting U- or V-shaped recoveries, implying a relatively fast and broad bounce. But almost a year in, the two diverging strokes of the letter-K are widely seen as the best depiction of the unequal fallout of the current crisis. The concern is that a deepening divide risks fomenting the kind of discontent that, in extreme cases, can trigger populist uprisings.

Inequality among Swedish households, based on their disposable incomes, is now bigger than it was in the 1980s, according to the Riksbank. It will probably increase until the forecast horizon in 2035, even without accounting for the effect of the pandemic.

Last year, Sweden created at least 40 new stock-market billionaires, in krona terms, according to a survey by Dagens Industri. And the value of 169 individuals’ and families’ holdings increased by 295 billion kronor ($35 billion) to more than 1.3 trillion kronor. That’s equivalent to almost 40% of Swedes’ private savings in shares and equity funds.

Billionaires calling Sweden home include Hennes & Mauritz AB’s Stefan Persson, worth $22.1 billion, and investor Melker Schorling, with a fortune of $11.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The concern about rising inequality prompted Andersson to set up a commission for increased economic equality, which presented its findings in August.

bank.applisted.se / www.boldcashersbank.com



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