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- <text id=93CT1869>
- <link 90TT3422>
- <link 90TT0493>
- <title>
- Sweden--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Europe
- Sweden
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> During the seventh and eighth centuries, the Swedes were
- merchant seaman well known for their far reaching trade. In the
- ninth century, Nordic Vikings raided and ravaged the European
- Continent as far as the Black and Caspain Seas. During the 11th
- and 12th centuries, Sweden gradually became a unified Christian
- kingdom that later included Finland. Queen Margaret of Denmark
- united all the Nordic lands in the "Kalmar Union" in 1397.
- Continual tension within the countries and within the union
- gradually led to open conflict be tween the Swedes and the
- Danes in the 15th century. The union's final disintegration in
- the early 16th century brought on a long-lived rivalry between
- Norway and Denmark on one side and Sweden and Finland on the
- other. These repeated and frequent clashes had adverse
- consequences on the subsequent development of the Scandinavian
- countries.
- </p>
- <p> In the 16th century, Gustav Vasa crushed an attempt to
- restore the Kalmar Union with his fight for an independent
- Sweden and laid the foundation for modern Sweden. At the same
- time, he broke with the Catholic Church and established the
- Reformation. During the 17th century, after winning wars
- against Denmark, Russia, and Poland, Sweden-Finland (with
- scarcely more than 1 million inhabitants) emerged as a great
- power. Its contributions during the Thirty Years War under
- Gustav II Adolf (Gustavus Adolphus) determined the political,
- as well as the religious, balance of power in Europe. After
- Sweden conquered several provinces from Denmark in 1658, Swedish
- power included present-day Sweden, Finland, Ingermanland (in
- which Leningrad, U.S.S.R., is now located), Estonia, Latvia, and
- important coastal towns and other areas in northern Germany.
- </p>
- <p> Russia, Saxony-Poland, and Denmark-Norway pooled their power
- in 1700 and attacked the Swedish-Finnish empire. Although the
- young Swedish King Karl XII (also known as Charles XII) won
- spectacular victories in the early years of the Great Northern
- War his plan to attack Moscow and force Russia into peace
- proved too ambitious; he fell in battle in 1718. In the
- subsequent peace treaties, the allied powers, joined by Prussia
- and England-Hanover ended Sweden's reign as a great power.
- </p>
- <p> In 1809, Sweden suffered further territorial losses during
- the Napoleonic wars and was forced to cede Finland to Russia.
- The next year, the Swedish King, adopted heir, French Marshal
- Bernadotte, was elected Crown Prince as Karl Johan by the
- Riksdag. In 1813, his forces joined the allies against
- Napoleon. The Congress of Vienna compensated Sweden for its lost
- German territories through a merger of the Swedish and Norwegian
- Crowns in a dual monarchy, which lasted until 1905, when it was
- peacefully dissolved at Norway's request.
- </p>
- <p> Sweden's predominantly agricultural economy shifted
- gradually from village to private-farm based agriculture during
- the Industrial Revolution, but this change failed to bring
- economic and social improvements commensurate with the rate of
- population growth. About 1 million Swedes emigrated to the
- United States between 1850 and 1890.
- </p>
- <p> The 19th century was marked by the emergence of a liberal
- opposition press, abolition of guild monopolies in trade and
- manufacturing in favor of free enterprise, taxation and voting
- reforms, the installation of a national military service, and
- the rise in the electorate of three major party groups-Social
- Democrats Liberals, and Conservatives.
- </p>
- <p> During and after World War I, in which Sweden remained
- neutral, the country benefitted from the worldwide demand for
- Swedish steel, ball bearings, wood pulp, and matches. Postwar
- prosperity provided the foundations for the social welfare
- policies characteristic of modern Sweden. Foreign policy
- concerns in the 1930s centered on Soviet and German
- expansionism, which stimulated abortive efforts at Nordic
- defense cooperation. Sweden followed a policy of armed
- neutrality during World War II and currently remains nonaligned.
- </p>
- <p>Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> Six parties are represented in the Riksdag: the Social
- Democratic, Moderate (former-Conservative), Liberal, Center
- (former-Agrarian), communist, and the Environment (Greens).
- </p>
- <p> The Social Democrats have led the government for all but 6
- years since 1932. Olof Palme, the leader of that party from
- 1969 until his assassination February 28, 1986, was replaced by
- Ingvar Carlsson. Palme had served as prime minister from 1969 to
- 1976 and was returned to office in the 1982 and 1985 general
- elections. Between 1976 and 1982, the three nonsocialist
- parties had a Riksdag majority. The 1976 three-party government
- fell over the issue of nuclear energy policy, an issue
- eventually resolved by a referendum in 1980. A Liberal Party
- minority government (1978-79), led by Ola Ullsten, was succeeded
- by two coalition governments led by Center Party Prime Minister
- Thorbjorn Falldin.
- </p>
- <p> The governing Social Democratic Party, with its base among
- blue-collar workers and intellectuals and public-sector
- employees, derives much of its power from association with the
- National Swedish Confederation of Trade Unions (LO), which
- represents more than 90% of Sweden's blue-collar workers. The
- party program combines commitment to social welfare programs
- and government direction of the economy while encouraging growth
- and investment in the private sector. The primary goal of the
- Social Democrats is to maintain full employment, improving the
- living standards for Swedish wage earners, and institute
- programs such as wage-earner funds and codetermination
- (increased worker influence in management decisions) which party
- theorists refer to as "economic democracy."
- </p>
- <p> The Moderate Party has gained considerably in voter support
- over the last 18 years-from 11.5% in 1970 to 18.4% in 1988. The
- party emphasizes free enterprise, personal freedom, and
- reduction of the public-sector growth rate, while still
- supporting most of the social benefits introduced since the
- 1930s. The party also favors a strong defense and closer ties
- with Western Europe. Its voter base is urban business and
- professional people, but the party also attracts young voters,
- main-street shop owners, and, to a modest extent, blue-collar
- workers.
- </p>
- <p> The Liberal Party increased its share of the vote from 5.9%
- in 1982 to 12.3% in 1988. Party leader since 1983, Bengt
- Westerberg communicated the party's message-"social
- responsibility without socialism"-as a commitment to a
- free-market economy combined with comprehensive Swedish social
- welfare programs. Foreign aid and women's equality also are
- favorite issues for the Liberal Party. The party's support is
- centered in educated middle-class voters.
- </p>
- <p> The Center Party, originally supported by farming and
- forestry interests, maintains strong links with rural Sweden.
- The party grew in the mid-197Os and, during the 1976 elections,
- attracted significant numbers of urban Swedes concerned over
- nuclear power and increased centralization of government
- authority. With 24.1% of the 1976 vote, Center leader,
- Thorbjorn Falldin, was the natural leader of the non-socialist
- coalition government. Since then, the Center Party's support has
- declined. In alliance with the small Christian Democratic Party,
- Center won only 12% of the 1985 vote but secured 11.4% in the
- 1988 election after the alliance had been broken. Sweden's
- 1976-82 economic difficulties and the 1980 resolution of the
- nuclear energy issue may have contributed to this trend.
- Falldin resigned as party leader in December 1985 and was
- replaced by Karin Soder, the first woman to head a major Swedish
- political party. She left a year later for health reasons and
- was succeeded by Olof Johansson.
- </p>
- <p> Sweden's principal communist party is the Left Party (VPK),
- which while opposing Social Democratic concessions to free
- enterprise, consistently has voted in the Riksdag to allow the
- Social Democrats to form a government. In recent years, the VPK
- has adopted a stance critical of the Soviet Union on issues
- such as Afghanistan and Poland. VPK voter support remains
- stable-5.4% in 1985-just above the 4% needed for Riksdag
- representation. Various splinter communist groups, professing
- the ideologies of Soviet and other communist leaders, such as
- Trotsky and Mao, have never come close to Riksdag
- representation. Although voting is not compulsory, 85.9% of the
- eligible electorate participated in the 1988 national elections.
- </p>
- <p> For the first time in 70 years, a new party managed to gain
- representation in the Riksdag after the 1988 elections-the
- Environment Party (Greens) received 5.6% of the vote and has 20
- seats. The environment was one of the major issues in the 1988
- election. The Greens emphasize environmental aspects of all
- political, economic, and social matters. They oppose closer
- cooperation with the European Community (EC) and wish to
- completely phase out nuclear energy within 3 years.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, July
- 1989.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-