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INSIDE SWEDEN

Inside Sweden: City v countryside – where’s the best place to live?

In the latest edition of our Inside Sweden newsletter, The Local's editor Emma Löfgren writes about the pros and cons of buying a house in the Swedish countryside versus a more convenient home in a city or town.

Inside Sweden: City v countryside – where's the best place to live?
This traditional southern Swedish farm house is definitely out of the writer's budget. Photo: Conny Fridh/imagebank.sweden.se

Hej!

We’re in the process of selling our old house and buying a new one, and figuring out where to live is getting harder and harder every day.

Previously, all our homes have felt temporary. Like many of The Local’s readers, we’ve for years lived a life made up of boxes and suitcases, moving from country to country and city to city. Now for the first time we’re looking for a place where we can settle down – if not for good, then for a long time.

But how do you decide?

That farm house in the countryside, surrounded by beautiful scenery, with an incredible kitchen, wow factor and a lot of house for the money – but which also needs a new asbestos-free roof and has far too many mice for comfort?

The typical Swedish villa in a small town, no-frills but reliable, a manageable garden, nice neighbours and close to a preschool? Safe, but… boring?

Or a city apartment, close to everything but small and expensive?

The closer we get to needing to make up our minds, the harder it gets.

Where in Sweden have you chosen to live, and why? Or if you haven’t settled down yet, what kind of place would you like to live in? City or countryside?

The krona is at an almost record low against the euro, which is good for you if you’re a freelancer getting paid in euros but spending your money in Sweden – less good if you’re paid in kronor and planning a visit to a Eurozone country.

It’s been on a downward curve for a while now, and last year we asked an expert how foreigners can protect themselves against the tumbling krona.

If you have savings in kronor, now is not a good time to buy anything abroad – better to wait until the krona has strengthened. But if you have savings outside of Sweden in euros or dollars, and have been planning on making a big purchase in Sweden, now might be the right time.

To protect yourself against future fluctuations, it can be helpful to have savings in multiple currencies. You could for example keep one bank account in your home country if that is allowed and one in Sweden – or an account that lets you have a combination of currencies, such as Wise and Revolut.

Or, you can be like me and scream in horror at your Excel budget spreadsheet in the hope that it will somehow have an effect on your dwindling savings.

On the latest episode of The Local’s Sweden in Focus podcast, out today, we talk to an expert on the Swedish healthcare system. We also suggest five new Swedish lifestyle trends international media can pretend is the new lagom or hygge. Which fake Swedish concept would you pitch to the world?

This week we also interviewed a British man who is trying to move his paralysed Swedish wife back home to Sweden, but is being blocked by bureaucracy, and we interviewed an expert on EU politics about how people who want Sweden to stay in the EU should fight any Swexit challenges.

We published the latest issue of our monthly newsletter for Indians in Sweden and the latest issue of our weekly Politics in Sweden newsletter (members can update their newsletter settings here to receive future editions in their inbox).

Thanks for reading and speak soon,

Emma Löfgren
Editor, The Local Sweden

Inside Sweden is our weekly newsletter for members that gives you news, analysis and, sometimes, takes you behind the scenes at The Local. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to your newsletter preferences.

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INSIDE SWEDEN

Inside Sweden: Motti, molusk, migration and ministers

The Local's editor Emma Löfgren rounds up the biggest stories of the week in our Inside Sweden newsletter.

Inside Sweden: Motti, molusk, migration and ministers

Hej,

It was peculiar but more moving than I expected to see international football icons such as David Beckham and Roy Hodgson fly in to attend Sven-Göran Eriksson’s funeral in the small, rural town of Torsby, where the late Swedish football coach grew up.

While Eriksson’s record was hardly pristine – major football accolades mixed with scandals and affairs – he was much-loved in his hometown in the Värmland region.

He returned that love. Eriksson – or let’s just call him Svennis, as he’s known in Sweden – never lost his Värmland accent. In between moving around the world to coach teams such as Lazio, England, Mexico, Fiorentina, Manchester City and so on, he always returned back to Värmland, back to Torsby and the nearby town of Sunne.

You could see the traces of this in his final departure as well – several aspects of his funeral were apparently orchestrated by Svennis himself, from the decision to open the ceremony to the public and show it on a big screen outside the church, to the food served at the service for invited guests such as Beckham: motti and molusk.

Motti is a type of porridge brought by Finns to Värmland in the 1600s, served with bacon and lingonberries. Molusk is, thankfully, much less scary than it sounds: it’s a chocolate cake, also from Värmland and served by the local bakery in Torsby.

The funeral was even broadcast and live-blogged by Aftonbladet, Sweden’s biggest newssite, which gives you an idea of Svennis’s popularity in his home country.

In other news

Shorter days make it much harder to get enough vitamin D during the colder months of the year in Sweden. Is it worth taking supplements during the winter?

There’s a lot of budget news at the moment, including plans to double the civil defence budget and allocating over 4.4 billion kronor to restricting migration, including giving 350,000 kronor to refugees who choose to return home voluntarily.

The government had a major reshuffle this week, moving some of the top roles around. I explain what’s happening on the latest episode of our Sweden in Focus podcast.

We’ve also written a few guides to the reshuffle, including:

What you need to know about Sweden’s new foreign minister.

What you need to know about Sweden’s new migration minister.

What are the Swedish government’s key priorities for the year ahead?

Sweden’s new migration minister said in one of his first comments that integration is key to creating a better life for everyone in the country, which made me think of this article we wrote a while back based on The Local’s readers’ suggestions.

What steps do you need to follow to become a Swedish citizen? In this week’s episode of Sweden in Focus Extra – for Membership+ subscribers – my colleagues discussed what documentation you need to provide when applying for Swedish citizenship.

Becky wrote about a village in northern Sweden that’s paying people 10,000 kronor to move there. That’s not even enough money to cover the move, but maybe if you’re thinking of moving anyway, it’s enough to make you consider Glommersträsk.

Have a good weekend,

Emma

Inside Sweden is our weekly newsletter for members which gives you news, analysis and, sometimes, takes you behind the scenes at The Local. It’s published each Saturday and with Membership+ you can also receive it directly to your inbox.

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