REUTERS - Sweden needs more
immigrants not fewer to sustain its cradle-to-grave welfare system and care for
an ageing population, a senior official at the state
employment service told
Reuters in an interview.
In 2015, a record
163,000 people sought asylum in Sweden, the highest per capita in Europe, part
of an influx of more than a million people who entered the continent fleeing
war and poverty.
The pace of
migration has worried some Swedes - the anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats party
has seen its support surge - leading the country to introduce tough asylum
laws. Applications are expected to drop by around 80 percent this year.
However, without
significant immigration, Sweden faces a labor shortage in the coming years,
Hakan Gustavsson, head of forecasts at Sweden's Public Employment Agency said.
"The addition
to the labor force from abroad has alleviated the shortage we still see,"
he said. "It has increased economic activity in the country, whatever way
you look at it, it has been an asset to have taken in so many born
abroad."
"The way
forward is not to have less immigration."
With a low birthrate
and the proportion of retirees rising, Sweden needs immigration of 64,000
people per year on average to maintain the balance between those who are
working and those who are drawing a pension, Gustavsson said.
Sweden's population
is expected to surpass 10 million next year, an increase of roughly 800,000 or
nearly 9 percent in the last decade. Most of the increase has come from
immigration.
But last year's
abrupt U-turn on generous asylum rules threatens to cut off much needed labor.
The Migration Agency
expects around 30,000 asylum applications this year and between 30,000 to
50,000 in 2017.
A big challenge,
however, will be to integrate immigrants into the labor market.
Sweden's
unemployment rate was 6.3 percent in the third quarter, according to the
statistics office. Unemployment among foreign-born Swedes is closer to 15
percent.
People born in Asia
and Africa fare even worse with unemployment rates of 21 and 29 percent
respectively.
Gustavsson said many
immigrants had little education making it hard for them to enter Sweden's job
market, where there are few low-skilled jobs.
"We need still
these people," he said.
"The challenge
lies in integration. Education is a part but there is no silver bullet. Several
policy areas must interact."
REUTERS
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