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    26 commenti

    1. gerningur on

      Is there any obvious reason for this. Why have Sweden and Finland fallen behind the other Nordics and Germany?

    2. Many-Gas-9376 on

      Every time I see the new numbers come in, I open them in in cold sweat expecting Finland to be on top.

    3. osalcabb on

      It surprised me how Sweden’s rate is almost double compared to Belgium and Italy.

    4. dailywanker69 on

      Swedes will claim that the data is wrong and that it’s not possible to measure it like that because in Sweden blah blah.

    5. I wonder how it’s measured.

      In Poland it’s only people without work, actively looking for work (meaning, they need to register and then visit a proper agency every month).

      I was without a job and technically not-unemployed (I didn’t register) for almost a year.

    6. Holy hell Czechia and Poland at 2.6% – 2.7%.

      That’s outright labor shortage territory.

    7. CrackieChan88 on

      To be fair Greece and Spain do make some sense. Hear me out:

      During summer holidays there’s a lot of apartment owners who rent during the summer so technically they don’t have a job.

    8. For Sweden the unemployment rate of native Swedes (~5%) is way lower than that of the foreign born residents (13%-16%). For Finland however, the picture looks worse as they have a much smaller foreign born population than Sweden pulling the unemployment rate up.

    9. TheDarck on

      well atleast we’re still the first in youth unemployment 🇪🇸

    10. Why so negative? We have a lot of uncovered potential. From physics perspective we’re at a peak and are going to convert that potential energy into kinetic. Any day now.

    11. Min_Min_Drops on

      Lithuanians – unemployed, also Lithuanians – we have shortage of workers, let’s import.

    12. That’s some weird EU numbers. According to Czech Statistical Office, it was 4.4% in FEB2025. For Czechia.

    13. Wise-Spring7283 on

      Romania only at 5.6? Man , surprising.
      They could do better , and make it to top 3

    14. Illustrious_Land699 on

      The rate in Italy is actually even much lower given the 2-3 million people who work without a regular contract, the problem remains the salaries that do not grow

    15. 4nhedone on

      I was worried for a second they took our place until reading the last part of the title. Impressive they surpassed Greece, our legit competitor. Still amazes me they surpassed Portugal and Romania, though.

    16. Ijustlikethings on

      For Finland those high unemployment numbers are probably a sum of many causes.

      Debt issues: uncontrolled debt increase -> drastic measures to lower it -> tax-funded jobs (healthcare etc) decrease. Generic investment-rate drops.

      Unemployment benefits have been revamped: you were able to earn 300€ freely without it affecting your benefits, now it’s 0€ -> low-paying part-time jobs are not worth it. You get more money by being unemployed than working 10 hour a week in grocery store.

      Housing market slows down, not that many new houses/apartments/buildings are being built, construction halts, construction jobs and small construction-related businesses drop dead.

      Software developers had a wonderful time during 2020, now that career path is just crickets. I guess that’s same everywhere.

      Russia invaded Ukraine -> border closed, sanctions, all Russia-related (export, tourism) jobs go poof.

      Interest rates hit Finland hard, different than other countries. I haven’t researched this topic but it has been mentioned many times. Worth a read.

      EU supported (during pandemic) south more than the north, now south has a “lead” through those investments they were able to make.

      Also as a last one from the top of my head: Finland hasn’t had a new “Nokia” in a decade (or more). Finland lives (on debt) like rich guy it used to be. It’s bound to cause trouble down the line.

      Just some things here, there’s probably more. I’m no expert.

      Also: no, the immigrants are NOT causing this.

    17. Tuffeman on

      Sweden has had massive immigration from poor and dysfunctional countries until recently. These people are at a large degree unemployable and will remain so. That plus a bad economical cycle can only result in this

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