Sweden
1. Official institutions
- Statistics Sweden (Statistiska centralbyrån, SCB) — national statistical institute: https://www.scb.se
- The Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention (Brottsförebyggande rådet, BRÅ)
- The Swedish Migration Agency (Migrationsverket) — migration and asylum statistics
- The Swedish Police Authority (Polisen) — maintains the official list of “vulnerable areas” (utsatta områden)
2. Key datasets
- SCB: employment rate by country of birth and length of residence
- BRÅ reports (2005 and 2021 editions): crime and origin, with breakdowns by socioeconomic factors
- Official police list of “vulnerable areas,” revised periodically
3. Demographics
3.1 Current population composition
- As of December 31, 2024, Sweden’s total population was 10,587,700. Approximately 2.2 million people are foreign-born, or 21% of the population — up from 11.3% in 2000, roughly doubling over 24 years. Source: SCB, “Sweden’s population by country of birth/region, citizenship and background, December 31, 2024” — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/statistik-efter-amne/befolkning-och-levnadsforhallanden/befolkningens-sammansattning-och-utveckling/befolkningsstatistik/pong/tabell-och-diagram/utrikes-fodda--medborgarskap-och-utlandsksvensk-bakgrund/sveriges-befolkning-efter-fodelseland-region-medborgarskap-och-bakgrund-31-december-2024/
- 2024 immigration inflow: 116,200 people (+23% vs. 2023, or +21,700). Leading countries of birth among new immigrants: Ukraine (28,100, under temporary protection status following Russia’s invasion — therefore an asylum/protection category), followed by people born in Sweden returning from abroad (11,900), then India, Germany, China, Syria, Poland, Pakistan, Turkey, and Iran. Net migration in 2024 (inflows minus outflows): +29,700. Source: SCB, “Population increased in 2024 – despite fewer births” — https://www.scb.se/pressmeddelande/befolkningen-okade-2024---trots-minskade-fodslar/
- Breakdown of annual flows by motive (asylum/work/family): not publicly confirmed during this research. Migrationsverket’s detailed permit-category statistics would be required and should be checked directly at migrationsverket.se/statistik.
3.2 Origin breakdown
3.3 Immigration waves (1945 – present)
- As of 1945, immigrants made up less than 2% of the population. Between 1945 and 1948, approximately 30,000 survivors of Nazi concentration camps were resettled in Sweden, and roughly 30,000 Estonians and 5,000 Latvians remained in Sweden after the war.
- 1950s–1960s: era of labor migration. The 1952 Nordic common labor market agreement drove significant migration, especially from Finland.
- 1967–1972: under union pressure, labor migration from non-Nordic countries was restricted by new laws; non-Nordic labor migration formally ended in 1972.
- 1970s–1980s: transition from labor-driven to refugee-driven migration, with growing arrivals from the former Yugoslavia, the Middle East, and Latin America. From the late 1970s through the 1980s, Sweden became a major receiving country for both asylum seekers and resettled refugees, with rising numbers from Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Eritrea, Somalia, and South American countries.
- 1990s: thousands of refugees arrived from the former Yugoslavia.
- 2010s – present: refugees from the Syrian civil war; from 2022, Ukrainian arrivals under temporary protection status following Russia’s invasion (the largest single group of new immigrants in 2024, at 28,100). Sources: Migration Policy Institute, “Sweden: By Turns Welcoming and Restrictive in its Immigration Policy” — https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/sweden-turns-welcoming-and-restrictive-its-immigration-policy; Wikipedia, “Immigration to Sweden” — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_to_Sweden
- Limitation: this decade-by-decade account relies on policy-research and encyclopedic summary sources; a precise year-by-year immigration flow time series directly from SCB’s own Statistikbanken tables could not be confirmed during this research.
3.4 Age structure (population pyramid)
- SCB’s published material states in narrative form that foreign-born residents have a different age structure from native-born residents, with a higher share in working age and relatively fewer children and elderly, noting that a large share of immigrants are aged 25–34. Source: SCB, “Utrikes födda i Sverige” — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/sverige-i-siffror/manniskorna-i-sverige/utrikes-fodda-i-sverige/
- However, a directly comparable numeric pair (native-born vs. foreign-born, by age bracket such as 0–17 / 18–64 / 65+, in the format required for an age-pyramid chart) could not be confirmed from the SCB pages consulted. This would require a direct query of SCB’s Statistikdatabasen (table BE0101E, “Population by country of birth, age and gender”).
3.5 Long-term projection (to 2070)
- Total population
- According to SCB’s 2024 population projection, Sweden’s population is projected to grow from 10.5 million in 2023 to 11.8 million in 2070 (+1.3 million, +12%). Long-term, annual immigration is projected at just under 100,000 people per year, with net migration (inflows minus outflows) averaging around 30,000 per year. Source: SCB, “Sveriges framtida befolkning 2024–2070” — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/statistik-efter-amne/befolkning-och-levnadsforhallanden/befolkningens-sammansattning-och-utveckling/befolkningsframskrivningar/pong/statistiknyhet/sveriges-framtida-befolkning-2024-2070/
- A projected future share of the population that is foreign-born (analogous to the “share of Danish origin” figure used for Denmark) could not be confirmed from the SCB material consulted. SCB’s published text states the foreign-born share is expected to keep rising through nearly the entire projection period, but no specific percentage for 2070 could be confirmed within the scope of this research.
4. Public finances — net cost
- Two distinct methodologies coexist in Sweden, producing opposing results depending on scope (refugees only vs. all immigrants) and time horizon (single year vs. lifetime):
Methodology 1 — lifetime net cost per refugee (commissioned by ESO, the Expert Group on Public Economics, an independent committee under the Ministry of Finance):
- Joakim Ruist (University of Gothenburg, commissioned by ESO), 2015/2018: average net cost per refugee and refugee family member, averaged over their time in Sweden, of 74,000 SEK (70,000 SEK in 2007 data). This category covers asylum/refugee families only, not all immigration. Source: ESO (https://eso.expertgrupp.se/)
- Lina Aldén and Mats Hammarstedt (2016): net cost of approximately 190,000 SEK in the first year after registration, declining to approximately 95,000 SEK in the seventh year — a gradual convergence toward fiscal balance.
Methodology 2 — aggregate net balance for all immigrants, long time series (commissioned by Konjunkturinstitutet / National Institute of Economic Research, on government mandate):
- Specialstudie 117 (2024), “Invandrades nettobidrag till de offentliga finanserna 1983–2022”: the net contribution of all immigrants to public finances has been persistently negative since the 1980s, but turned slightly positive again in the most recent year studied — an aggregate net positive contribution of 6 billion SEK (0.1% of GDP), or approximately 2,700 SEK per foreign-born person (out of 2.2 million). People born in India stand out as the most positive net-contributing group. Source: https://www.konj.se/media/kpgnt5iw/specialstudie-117-invandrades-nettobidrag-till-de-offentliga-finanserna-1983-2022.pdf
- Follow-up, June 2025: Specialstudie 116, “Samhällsekonomiska effekter av migrationen till Sverige” (also government-commissioned) — https://www.konj.se/media/44dkqfy1/specialstudie-116-samhallsekonomiska-effekter-av-migrationen-till-sverige.pdf
- SNS (independent institute): in 2017, SNS funded the research project “Lärdomar om integration,” led by Joakim Ruist, on global migration generally (not an isolated estimate of Sweden’s net cost, but an academic reference framework): https://snsse.cdn.triggerfish.cloud/uploads/2020/02/global-migration--orsaker-och-konsekvenser-web.pdf
- Comparison with Denmark: not publicly confirmed during this research — would require direct reference to the Danish Ministry of Finance’s generational-accounting model (generally cited as producing a higher net cost for non-European immigration than the Swedish ESO/Konjunkturinstitutet methodology, but the exact comparative figure could not be confirmed and is not invented here).
- Methodological limitation: the primary PDF documents (Specialstudie 117 and others) could not be directly extracted by the research tools used here (extraction failure or 403 error). Consistency with press/summary sources was checked, but the primary documents themselves were not read directly.
4.1 Pension system / contributor-to-pensioner ratio
5. Labor market
- Sweden has one of the most thoroughly documented employment gaps between native-born and foreign-born populations in Europe — SCB.
- 2024 (annual average) employment rate: native-born 70.0% (men 71.5%, women 68.5%); foreign-born 65.8% (down 1.3 points vs. 2023). In Q4 2024: 83.2% for native-born vs. 73.1% for foreign-born (a different measure, restricted to the labor-force population). The gap ranges from 4 to 10 points depending on the measure used.
- 2024 unemployment rate: native-born 5.7%; foreign-born 16.2% (a gap of roughly 10.5 points, widening vs. 2023). Source: SCB Labour Force Survey (AKU) — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/statistik-efter-amne/arbetsmarknad/utbud-av-arbetskraft/arbetskraftsundersokningarna-aku/pong/statistiknyhet/arbetskraftsundersokningarna-aku-2025/ Detailed table (by origin, length of residence): https://www.statistikdatabasen.scb.se/pxweb/sv/ssd/START__AM__AM0401__AM0401R/
- Employment data broken down by entry motive (work/family/asylum): not publicly confirmed during this research. This would require an SCB cross-tabulation by residence-permit category, for which no directly linkable official page was identified.
6. Security / justice
- BRÅ’s 2021 report addresses the overrepresentation of certain groups in crime statistics by origin, with a breakdown by socioeconomic factors — an important methodological point requiring explanation.
- Report 2021:9, “Misstänkta för brott bland personer med inrikes respektive utrikes bakgrund” (BRÅ, published August 25, 2021, covering 2007–2018): being registered as a crime suspect is approximately 2.5 times more frequent among foreign-born people than among Swedish-born people with two Swedish-born parents. The share of suspects in the population declined in both groups between 2007 and 2018 (a temporal comparison). For Swedish-born people with two foreign-born parents, roughly half of the overrepresentation disappears once age, sex, disposable income, education level, and municipality type are controlled for — though the gap does not fully close even after adjustment. Official report (PDF): https://bra.se/download/18.45e4b8e192705389a34b52/1729514247826/2021_9_Misstankta_for_brott_bland_personer_med_inrikes_respektive_utrikes_bakgrund.pdf Reference page: https://bra.se/rapporter/arkiv/2021-08-25-misstankta-for-brott-bland-personer-med-inrikes-respektive-utrikes-bakgrund
- Complementary study, ESO 2025:4, “Särskilt utsatta,” on the link between ethnic segregation and delinquency: https://eso.expertgrupp.se/rapporter/2025_4-sarskilt-utsatta/
- A breakdown of crime statistics by legal/illegal residence status: not publicly confirmed (BRÅ’s statistics classify by native-born/foreign-born origin, not by legality of residence status).
7. Education
- Spring 2024 eligibility rate for upper secondary school (gymnasiebehörighet): 87.6% for students of Swedish background versus 73.3% for students with a foreign background (utländsk bakgrund) — a gap of 14.3 points. Within the foreign-background group: 74.8% for girls versus 71.9% for boys. The rate is highest among students born in Sweden or who arrived before school age, and notably lower among students who arrived at an older school age — length of schooling in Sweden is the determining factor. Average final grade score in 2024 (all students): 14.4 points. Source: Skolverket — https://www.skolverket.se/download/18.6b8c1151936aed25c029/1732702300971/pdf13172.pdf
8. Housing
- Residential segregation is documented through the Police Authority’s “vulnerable areas” (utsatta områden) classification.
- Lägesbild 2025 (Police Authority, a report to the government): a total of 65 areas classified, of which 46 are “vulnerable” and 19 “especially vulnerable” — up from 59 in the previous 2023 edition. Part of this increase is due to 7 areas being reclassified into smaller sub-areas, so the year-over-year comparison requires a methodological caveat. Official report (PDF): https://polisen.se/siteassets/dokument/organiserad_brottslighet/utsatta-omraden/lagesbild-over-utsatta-omraden-2025.pdf
- Population composition of “exclusion areas” (utanförskapsområden) (Boverket, report 2024:18): 55% of residents are foreign-born, 40% born in a non-European country (2023 data). Compared with the national average foreign-born share of 21% (see Section 3), this shows clear concentration in these areas. Source: Boverket — https://www.boverket.se/globalassets/publikationer/dokument/2024/boendesegregationens-utveckling.pdf
- Nationally, the majority of Sweden’s 2.1 million foreign-born residents actually live in areas with favorable socioeconomic conditions (“area type 4,” approximately 845,000 people) — segregation is concentrated in a minority of areas, not across the immigrant population as a whole. Source: SCB — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/artiklar/2023/segregationen-synlig-aven-i-vara-dagliga-resmonster/
- Complementary report: Boverket 2025:13, “Livsvillkor i utanförskapsområden” — https://www.boverket.se/globalassets/publikationer/dokument/2025/livsvillkor-i-utanforskapsomraden2.pdf
9. Social cohesion
- Reference opinion surveys: the SOM Institute (a survey research institute on society, opinion, and media at the University of Gothenburg, a public research infrastructure) publishes an annual chapter on immigration and asylum policy as part of its national SOM survey. SOM 2024:4, “Flykting- och invandringspolitiken” (based on the 2023 national survey) — https://www.gu.se/sites/default/files/2024-02/R2024_4.pdf Methodology note for the 2023 edition: https://www.gu.se/sites/default/files/2024-03/4.%20Den%20nationella%20SOM-unders%C3%B6kningen%202023%20-%20En%20metod%C3%B6versikt.pdf Precise figures (% favorable/unfavorable opinion by year): not publicly confirmed during this research — the SOM Institute’s PDFs could not be extracted with the research tools used here, and would require manual verification before citation.
- Interpersonal and institutional trust by origin: academic chapter “Förtroende och tillit i en segregerad stad” (Rönnerstrand & Solevid, SOM Institute) — https://www.gu.se/sites/default/files/2021-10/115-130%20R%C3%B6nnerstrand%20o%20Solevid.pdf Qualitative finding reported in this literature: interpersonal trust is measured as lower among people born outside Sweden (particularly outside Europe) than among Swedish-born people, with the gap in institutional trust generally smaller than the gap in interpersonal trust. Precise figures: not publicly confirmed during this research (the PDF could not be reliably extracted) — manual verification needed before citing a specific number.
- School segregation: Skolverket publishes official statistics on the share of students with a “foreign background” by school, but a precise gap figure could not be reliably confirmed during this research. https://www.skolverket.se/download/18.954e82318e64549b9f1d/1711120454132/pdf12612.pdf
- Naturalization (a proxy for integration): SCB publishes an official time series of the number of people who acquired Swedish citizenship, by prior nationality and sex, 2000–2024: https://www.statistikdatabasen.scb.se/pxweb/sv/ssd/START__BE__BE0101__BE0101N/MedborgarByteLandK/ 80,175 people acquired Swedish citizenship in 2020 (+25% vs. 2019, an atypically high year), versus 68,898 in 2017. Source: SCB annual statistical release — https://www.scb.se/hitta-statistik/statistik-efter-amne/befolkning-och-levnadsforhallanden/befolkningens-sammansattning-och-utveckling/befolkningsstatistik/pong/statistiknyhet/befolkningsstatistik-helaret-20202/ This figure should be updated to the most recent year available in the SCB table above.
10. Recent political context
- Sweden was the most welcoming country in Europe in 2015; a dramatic policy tightening has occurred since 2022 under pressure from the Sweden Democrats (Sverigedemokraterna).
- Asylum acceptance has been nearly frozen entirely, alongside a “net-zero return” policy.
- Notable case: an unusually rapid policy reversal, documentable in close to real time.
11. Data limitations and biases
⚠️ Limits BRÅ’s crime statistics are themselves a politically sensitive subject within Sweden (their publication has been a subject of debate) — worth noting for transparency. In addition, several primary PDF sources cited here (Konjunkturinstitutet’s Specialstudie 117, Skolverket’s education statistics, Boverket’s housing statistics, and the SOM Institute / Rönnerstrand & Solevid social-cohesion research) could not be directly extracted by the research tools used (extraction failure or 403 error), and consistency was checked only against press/summary sources. Direct access to these primary documents is recommended before final publication.