EU Sweden's government could be about to collapse in a row over rent


Sweden's government is on the brink of collapse.
Prime Minister Stefan Löfven has been given an ultimatum: withdraw his plans to implement reforms to the laws governing Sweden's rental market or face a no-confidence vote on Monday.

But while the timing of this crisis might come as a surprise, the fact that it came was inevitable.

From day one, the Left Party has made it clear that it could not keep the government alive if it decided to let market forces guide rental prices.

It is just the latest row in Sweden’s current “red-green” minority government, which was founded in January 2019.
The cabinet, consisting of Social Democrats and the Green Party, only has 116 seats out of the Swedish Parliament’s 349 - about one-third.

While keeping its formal supporters, the Center Party and the Liberals, happy, the government has had to tread cautiously in order to not rouse the Left Party.


Now, Löfven seems to have lost his balance.

With the Left Party losing its confidence in the government, the right-wing Sweden Democrats from the opposite side of the political spectrum used the chance to call for a no-confidence vote.

The two other opposition parties, the liberal-conservative Moderate Party and the Christian Democrats have also announced that they are ready to oust the government.

Politically weak government​

Minority governments are the rule in Sweden, but this government has had an extraordinarily hard time, said Professor Ulf Bjereld at the University of Gothenburg.

“This is a politically very weak government since it depends on support from both the left and right-wing to function," he said.

After months of failed negotiations since the general election in September 2018, Sweden's Social Democrats and the Green Party finally found a way to form a government - Löfven¨s second - in January 2019.

The solution was a 16-page document, called Januariavtalet, meaning the January Agreement. In the agreement, the Centre Party and the Liberals promised to abstain from voting against Löfven as prime minister.

However, this promise came with a price tag. The Social Democrats had to accept a long list of political initiatives that are not typical for a labour party, among them a promise to allow landlords to set rents for their property.

“This is a compromise they were forced to make. They had to go to great lengths to be able to secure the cabinet,” Bjereld explained.

A new way of setting rent​

In the past, the amount of rent that Sweden’s three million tenants have to pay has been decided through collective bargaining.

Instead of direct negotiation between landlords and tenants, the Swedish tenants’ organisation Hyresgästföreningen, enters into agreements with the property owners on behalf of all tenants. This makes it hard for landlords to raise the rent without first negotiating with the tenants’ organisation.

This is, said Martin Hofverberg, chief economist at Hyresgästföreningen, one of the main reasons why rent in popular urban areas, such as Stockholm, have not risen as fast as in other capitals.

“The Swedish model is unique,” Hofverberg said. “It lies somewhere in between a market system and strict regulation. It is a flexible system that also takes parameters of quality into consideration when setting the rent.”

But if you ask the Swedish Property Federation, Fastighetsägarna, the current system is far from flexible enough.

“When collectively negotiated rents are far from market rents you either wait several years to get an apartment or turn to a growing black market. The limited reform on the table is about making investments in new and easier accessible rental apartments possible where demand is high,” said Policy Director Martin Lindvall.

He argues that this proposal would make Sweden a more attractive place to build new residential buildings, as do the political parties backing the proposal.

“If the rent setting would be better adjusted to the market over time, our members’ will to invest would grow,” Lindvall stated.

In his opinion, this issue has been inflated into something much bigger than it actually is.

“This will only affect very few people. The proposal would only mean that owners of apartments built after July 2022 would have the right to choose whether to negotiate collectively or directly with the tenant.”

The Finnish example​

The rental housing market in neighbouring Finland has time and again been brought up in the Swedish debate.

In the early 1990s, when Finland went through a huge economic crisis, the Finnish rental market went from very regulated to free-market conditions in only a few years.

“It was way too radical,” described Anne Viita, chair of the Finnish tenant’s organisation, Vuokralaiset.

She explains that in Finland, landlords can terminate rental contracts if tenants do not accept an increase in rent.

“The Swedish model has always been viewed as an ideal,” she said, warning Swedes of making an irreversible move that they might regret later on.

The tenants, the Left Party, and others, who are against the new rent setting proposal, see Finland as an example of where Sweden could be headed.

“It would worsen the negotiation position of tenants,” noted Martin Hovferberg, representing the Swedish renters.

He explained that renting a home in a newly constructed building in Sweden is not cheap today either. Nevertheless, collective bargaining evens out the differences between new and existing homes over 10 years or more.

“This new model would mean that the rent would start out high and just continue to rise,” he argued.

The property owners’ Martin Lindvall found the comparison with Finland unfortunate.

“It’s like comparing apples with bananas.”

“Free rent setting for new production is already a controversial question in Sweden. We have no preconditions for going further with this deregulation,” Lindvall said.

What can Löfven do next?​

To political analyst Ulf Bjereld, the timing of the crisis is not surprising but was not inevitable.

It was triggered by a report about new legislation for the pricing of rent in new housing that came out on June 4th. The draft is now out for consultation, and the bill itself is not likely to be introduced until the autumn.

“The Left Party does not want to wait that long, as the next general election is planned for next year,” Bjereld noted.

“This is ideologically very important for the Left Party. This can mobilize their own voters, but some left-leaning social democrats are also supporting the Left in this.”

“The Left Party is afraid of being seen as too compliant,” he added. “It has basically been a question about when not if the party would say no.”

Now, Löfven has three alternatives, according to Bjereld.

“The most probable scenario is that he utilises the time until Monday to negotiate a deal that all parties can accept,” he said.

The prime minister himself assured at a press meeting Friday that “Of course we are working to avoid a crisis.”

The second alternative is that the Swedish parliament, Riksdagen, will force him to resign. This would mean that Sweden would be governed by a caretaker government - most probably led by Löfven.

“The least probable alternative is that Löfven after seven unstable years as prime minister calls a snap election,” Bjereld said.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Toolbox
you either wait several years to get an apartment
Yeah, in theory this is a bad thing. In practice your parents put you in the queue when you're like fifteen and then once you're ready to move out you already have half a decade of queue time and can get an apartment in no time, and then you immediately put yourself in the queue again to gather queue time so that you'll have years of it again once you feel like moving out again. In practice what you get is a cheap reasonably sized apartment in the city dirt cheap.
 
If there wasn't like a million+ immigrants in the last decade or so, there would be way less problems in the housing market.
I can't imagine immigrants blocking up the housing market. Apartment life and sanitation, sure. But housing?

Then again, I'm American and have no idea how Sweden works, but I assume it's like America except more gay.
 
Yeah, in theory this is a bad thing. In practice your parents put you in the queue when you're like fifteen and then once you're ready to move out you already have half a decade of queue time and can get an apartment in no time, and then you immediately put yourself in the queue again to gather queue time so that you'll have years of it again once you feel like moving out again. In practice what you get is a cheap reasonably sized apartment in the city dirt cheap.

Except people don't want to wait decades to move, which is why there exists a huge black market for this in the first place.
 
I can't imagine immigrants blocking up the housing market. Apartment life and sanitation, sure. But housing?

Then again, I'm American and have no idea how Sweden works, but I assume it's like America except more gay.
While house ownership is around 6x%, many of those are legacy houses or ones built by companies. The country is regulated a lot, so they just don't give out land private people to build on. That means the supply of new homes, especially in the cities which are the economic centers are not meeting the demand in time.

It's California, but less gay.
 
Can any non-burgers explain to me what it means in Parliamentary systems when a "government" is formed or collapsed? Is it like a cabinet, or a voting coalition, or what?

From what I understand, the PM is the leader of whichever party holds majority in the legislature. In the US, this isn't the case, because Congress and the President are elected separately.
 
As much as I want to criticize Swedish immigration policies, immigration or not the politicians would have found some way to fuck up the housing market.
It is a combination of many things. Excess regulation, big taxes, limited housing supply etc. Sweden worked until it was a modest social democratic country with a culture of saving and productive jobs, but after the 90s they basically became a weird mix of neo-liberal policies and huge taxes.

If the economy was more distributed it would be less of a problem, but because this is the "modern world" most economic activity are centered around a few towns. So you have a ton of immigrants and people from the countryside raising the demand for living space.

Can any non-burgers explain to me what it means in Parliamentary systems when a "government" is formed or collapsed? Is it like a cabinet, or a voting coalition, or what?
When forming a government in a parliamentary system you basically have to have enough representatives in the Parliament. That is usually made by having political parties entering coalitions. Giving their members positions as ministers etc. When the coalition falls apart the party loses it's numbers to actively be a government.

So basically a voting coalition with seats in ministries etc.
 
Can any non-burgers explain to me what it means in Parliamentary systems when a "government" is formed or collapsed? Is it like a cabinet, or a voting coalition, or what?

From what I understand, the PM is the leader of whichever party holds majority in the legislature. In the US, this isn't the case, because Congress and the President are elected separately.
Whatever group that can get 51% of MP's votes gets to take over, like everything, and that 51% chooses the Prime Minster.
 
Can any non-burgers explain to me what it means in Parliamentary systems when a "government" is formed or collapsed? Is it like a cabinet, or a voting coalition, or what?

From what I understand, the PM is the leader of whichever party holds majority in the legislature. In the US, this isn't the case, because Congress and the President are elected separately.
Imagine if the president and secretaries were all house members and relied on party leadership votes to keep their positions.

Since this government is made of multiple political parties working together in a coalition it can change or break up depending on if parties join or leave the coalition.
 
Except people don't want to wait decades to move, which is why there exists a huge black market for this in the first place.
Again, you don't have to unless for some reason you decide to wait to put yourself in the queue until the moment you need to move. I've moved several times under this system and I've never really had a problem and I have a big 2 room+kitchen+balcony apartment with a bathtub and washing machine for roughly 5000kr (about 500 dollars) a month in the city. And there were cheaper ones that were even better that went to people with more queue time.
 
Can any non-burgers explain to me what it means in Parliamentary systems when a "government" is formed or collapsed? Is it like a cabinet, or a voting coalition, or what?
Right, pretty much a voting coalition that selects the cabinet, prime minister, and so forth.
One thing most people don't know is that upon the collapse of a government, the reigning monarch is ceremonially executed. That's why Sweden's current king has "the 16th" in his title, they've gone through a fair number.
 
Again, you don't have to unless for some reason you decide to wait to put yourself in the queue until the moment you need to move. I've moved several times under this system and I've never really had a problem and I have a big 2 room+kitchen+balcony apartment with a bathtub and washing machine for roughly 5000kr (about 500 dollars) a month in the city. And there were cheaper ones that were even better that went to people with more queue time.

If this was true then there wouldn't exist a black market now would it?

People need to move for all sorts of reasons, sometimes unexpected ones.

I really don't see how anyone can pretend that a decade long waiting list is a functioning system.
 
If this was true then there wouldn't exist a black market now would it?

People need to move for all sorts of reasons, sometimes unexpected ones.

I really don't see how anyone can pretend that a decade long waiting list is a functioning system.
You only have to wait that long for the very best apartments that literally everyone wants to have. If you're willing to settle for a shittier apartment you can get one with 1-3 years of queue time depending on the company you're queuing with. And you'll have the decade-long wait time for the best apartments by the time you move out of your parents' home if you had parents that weren't idiots and put you on the waiting list when you were young.

A big positive is that it means rich liberals from Stockholm have a harder time invading communities and displacing the people who have roots there. We don't have your Californians fleeing to Texas en-masse and shitting it up problem here.
 
Last edited:
You only have to wait that long for the very best apartments that literally everyone wants to have. If you're willing to settle for a shittier apartment you can get one with 1-3 years of queue time depending on the company you're queuing with. And you'll have the decade-long wait time for the best apartments by the time you move out of your parents' home if you had parents that weren't idiots and put you on the waiting list when you were young.

A big positive is that it means rich liberals from Stockholm have a harder time invading communities and displacing the people who have roots there. We don't have your Californians fleeing to Texas en-masse and shitting it up problem here.
As a proud burger, I can't imagine living in a country where I have to queue up to be assigned an apartment. Swedes are bugmen and deserve the society they have built for themselves.
 
As a proud burger, I can't imagine living in a country where I have to queue up to be assigned an apartment. Swedes are bugmen and deserve the society they have built for themselves.
It's kinda like living in a country where your neighborhoods aren't constantly being looted by niggers and you can go to the store without having to worry about getting shot. Hell, you don't even really need to lock your door when you go out.

Unless you live in Malmö, in which case you might be raped by a Muslim, but the solution to that is to not live in Malmö.
 
As a proud burger, I can't imagine living in a country where I have to queue up to be assigned an apartment. Swedes are bugmen and deserve the society they have built for themselves.
Yeah fuck that swedish-man right? Paying $500 a month for a big 2 bed in the city? What a fruitcake! I'd be happy to pay $3000 for the same thing because I can get it RIGHT now! That's the American way! Us Americans love a good assfucking (not a gay one though!) from private enterprise, I love it when rich people can make me suck their dicks (not in a gay way).

Sweden's system has it's problems, and I suspect that the rates really ARE too low (the article is useless - doesn't provide actual numbers or comparisons) but making fun of their system when you live in a place with frequently ridiculous prices, or a place that corporate interests have the run of your markets, is pretty fuckin' stupid.

It's like making fun of European health systems. Sure, you can get really good and fast healthcare in America if you have good insurance and make enough money to easily pay the premiums, but that doesn't mean our system is any good as a whole.
 
Back