Sweden’s economy grows more than expected in the third quarter

The country’s GDP grew 4.9% from the second quarter, according to Statistics Sweden

People stroll in the cold but sunny weather along Standvagen quayside in Stockholm, Sweden, on November 20, 2020, amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Sweden OUT
 / AFP / TT News Agency / Fredrik SANDBERG
Powered by automated translation

Sweden’s economy grew more than expected in the third quarter after the coronavirus receded during the summer months, freeing up pent-up demand during a brief respite from the pandemic.

Gross domestic product grew 4.9 per cent from the second quarter, Statistics Sweden said on Friday. That’s more than the 4.3 per cent expected in a Bloomberg survey of economists, and follows an 8 per cent contraction in the three months through June.

But Sweden’s government has already warned that the rest of the year is likely to be grim, as temperatures drop and the pandemic tightens its grip.

“The 3Q bounce shows what’s possible if and when the spread of Covid-19 recedes and restrictions are eased. Today’s batch of data confirms that Sweden’s manufacturing industry had largely recovered, while the service industry was still lagging before the second wave of the virus,” Johanna Jeansson, a Bloomberg economist, said.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven has said that Sweden is now facing a dark winter as the virus triggers a spike in new cases, forcing the government to resort to stricter curbs on movement.

Sweden’s Riksbank on Thursday published a bleak set of economic forecasts, including a weaker rebound next year than previously expected.

Maria Wallin Fredholm, an economist at Swedbank, said the latest data show “the trough was not quite as deep as expected” and it’s “good to see that goods exports data for October indicate continued export recovery.”

But, “other than that we know from our card transactions data from Swedbank Pay that consumption will be weak,” which means that the “recovery seen in 3Q is in some sense already history,” she said.

To fight the economic fallout from the pandemic, the Riksbank has resorted to unprecedented asset purchases, which were expanded by 40 per cent on Thursday to 700 billion kronor ($82bn). Though the bank has avoided negative interest rates since ending half a decade of the policy last year, it said it’s ready to go below zero again should the economic climate worsen.

While economists agree that the economic outlook is set to decline, Ms Jeansson said that “the fact that manufacturing is holding up while the level of activity in the service industry is already depressed means the hit to activity from the renewed spread of the virus will be smaller than during the spring.” As a result, Bloomberg Economics expects Swedish GDP “to shrink only slightly in 4Q,” she said.