Published: 8 Jun 11 10:45 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/34230/20110608/
Many Swedish companies are in need of foreign workers and the interest in working in Sweden is great, but the agency that deal with issuing their work permits, the Migration Board (Migrationsverket), has been struggling to keep up with the demand.
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
Swedish consumers are feeling less optimistic about the economy, with a down-turn also visible in the mood of the manufacturing industry, Sweden's National Institute for Economic Research said on Friday. READ () »
This year's Beckmans fashion graduates unleashed a dramatic clash of collections in Stockholm this week. It may have been dazzlingly hot outside in the sunshine, but on the catwalk things got a little dark. READ () »
The white-collar union Saco has lambasted Sweden's Employment Agency for its failure to help well-educated, foreign-born job seekers, whose unemployment rate is more than three times the average for people born in Sweden. READ () »
Fifteen percent of refugees in Sweden who enrolled in the new establishment system the past two years have gone on to find jobs, new figures show, leading some observers to worry that the low success rate will place a burden on the benefits system. READ () »
Sweden's central bank has appointed two new board members plucked from banking and academia to replace two outgoing members, one of whom was an outspoken critic of the Riksbank's commitment to the government's inflation goal. READ () »
Swedish telecom giant Ericsson has buckled under the pressure of European competition and will turn off the switch on a cable production plant in Sweden, leaving 350 employees without jobs. READ () »
While Sweden has a reputation for having one of the most painful tax bills in the world, a new report ranks Sweden 20th when comparing the tax burden on salaries when social security payments and salary brackets are taken into account. READ () »
Swedish telecom equipment maker Ericsson is suspected of having bribed ministers in Romania in connection with being awarded a contract for the country's emergency number and is now under investigation in the United States. READ () »
Sweden's largest business confederation has gone out guns blazing, criticizing politicians for not facing up to the challenges of "a lost year for Swedish exports" in 2012. READ () »
A Stockholm hospital saved from closure by private health care providers has been hailed by the Economist as one of modern's Sweden public-private success stories. READ () »
| 24/05 | Accounts Payable to Bosch RexrothAcademic Work Danmark | Malmö |
| 24/05 | Analog Field Application EngineerArrow EMEA | Kista, STHM |
| 24/05 | Business Analyst, KarlskronaCapgemini Sverige AB | Karlskrona, BLE |
| 24/05 | CAE-Engineers within Solid MechanicsRandstad AB | Linköping or Växjö or Västerås, VTM |
| 24/05 | Corporate Sports Sales Executivesmarcus evans (Scandinavia) ltd. | Stockholm |
| 24/05 | Development Engineer ? Control SystemsExperis Engineering | SKÅ |
| 24/05 | Enterprise Solutions Engineer | Sverige |
| 24/05 | Event Manager to pafPaf | Stockholm, STHM |
| 24/05 | Financial Manager | Kalmar |
| 24/05 | Global Lead Buyer; Fluid Management | Örebro |
Your comments about this article:
The comments below have not been moderated in advance and are not produced by The Local unless clearly stated. Readers are responsible for the content of their own comments. Comments that breach our terms and conditions will be removed.
I applied for my 2 year residence permit to move to Sweden in January.
Recently, (May 20th) the EU required a switchover to biometric cards that contain a chip with photo and fingerprints. My decision was made a couple of business days after to grant me permanent residence, but they hadn't taken my finger prints. I figure, no problem, get them done at the consulate in nearby San Francisco, or a local police station, and send them in.
Nope, I would have to fly out to the Embassy in Washington D.C to get them done, as will apparently any person applying to get a residence permit.
I suppose it will cut down on the number of applications.
And the head of Workpermit department replied "I understand everything, but unfortunately, it is the system and all you can do now is to wait!!!"
Talk about incompetence.
The only way it can take several months to process the paperwork is if nobody is working on it. Yes, sometimes nobody is working on it because they are waiting for information from some other source, but a little transparency into the process would at least help the potential immigrants understand.
For example, what exactly is the embassy doing with the application for "several months"? Are they sending private investigators out to check the veracity of your statements? Or is it just sitting in a drawer because they only work on the papers 1 day a month?
In many countries in which I've lived diplomas, certificates, and even degrees can be purchased without education. Do those prospective employers verify the authenticity of foreign would-be employees?
Re "teknowaffle" comments above, "Have you ever applied to become an American citiizen (with an American wife)?" Now there's real bureaucracy at work!