tresir2012
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An article about the Covid-19 in Sweden. On Tuesday the rolling seven-day average of new cases were 108, the lowest since March 13. The curve of the rolling seven-day average for Sweden have been different from those of other European countries during the summer, while the curves were low in other countries, Sweden had its peak of new cases in June, to go down in July, and a small hump in early August, when the number of new cases began to climb in Spain and France.
At the moment Sweden have also fewer cases of new infections compared to those in Norway, and Denmark, our closest neighbours. In the beginning of the pandemic their numbers were low, perhaps due to the lockdown they had, while Sweden didn't do a "hard" lockdown. It will be interesting to see what strategy will prove to have been the best, when the pandemic is over one day in the future.
Sweden records its fewest daily Covid-19 cases since March
Good to hear Frostowl. I was looking just recently at Sweden's economy in comparison and you have not done too badly.
Sweden's economy hit less hard by coronavirus
"Sweden, which avoided a lockdown during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, saw its economy shrink 8.6% in the April-to-June period from the previous three months.
The flash estimate from the Swedish statistics office indicated that the country had fared better than other EU nations which took stricter measures.
However, it was still the largest quarterly fall for at least 40 years.
The European Union saw a contraction of 11.9%for the same period.
Individual nations did even worse, with Spain seeing an 18.5% contraction, while the French and Italian economies shrank by 13.8% and 12.4% respectively.
Sweden's economy is doing better than other European nations
% change in quarterly GDP
Source: Eurostat/Statistics Sweden (Q2 fig)"
See link for graph and more info.