Monday, November 25, 2019

Swedish cities facing economic crisis

A new report from SVT states that 8 out of 10 Swedish municipalities are facing budgetary catastrophes, forcing them to drastically cut services:
For many of Sweden's municipalities, the money is not enough and the municipalities will have to make savings, either in the form of efficiency improvements or cuts in the coming years. 
"Basically, there is some kind of system failure right now, because things are going so fast," says Peter Carlstedt, municipal director in Kramfors, a municipality that is facing a shortfall of SEK 50 million.
How will they deal with this crisis?
Almost every other municipality, 46 per cent, states that they should save in the area of ​​disabled people. About the same number, 50 percent, should go down in the area of ​​individual and family care. 
Sorry disabled people and elderly Swedes, your life is going to get worse to pay for lazy, welfare-bound migrants. The cities pretty much admit the source of the problem is migration and childbirth:
"I think there are two reasons. We have been generous and received many new arrivals, but basically it is also a demographic problem. We have an aging population and the municipality is shrinking,” says Göran Eriksson, municipal manager.  
Sweden imported legions of low IQ people from the third world, fantasizing that these people would get to work and support the legions of boomer-generation Swedes who refused to have children.

They are finding out that, as congressman Steve King pointed out, you cannot continue your civilization by importing someone else's babies. The migrants refuse to work, and meanwhile there are not enough young Swedes to pay into the system.

Lest you think this is just my take, here's another story on the same topic:
The activities surrounding the refugee reception are another factor affecting the Swedish municipalities' economy.
"There you can see that some municipalities had a large refugee reception with a large activity around and when the state compensation is phased out it becomes a saving. If the municipality has had a low reception, these costs have not been built up", says Annika Wallenskog.
Basically, the cities are now stuck with the costs of their useless third world imports. 

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