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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>