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 Appeared in CNN.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Sweden exudes good health and well-being in
summer. The air smells of pine trees and people of all ages bicycle and
stroll well after dinner under the late-setting sun.
But as Swedes return from country cottages and Mediterranean beaches and
prepare for an election September 15, they are grappling with a vexing
problem: one of every six working-age Swedes is off work because of
illness or injury.
The number of people on government-paid sick leave has doubled in five
years, and welfare benefits for the sick and disabled now exceed the
government's military and education budgets combined.
In all, about 340,000 Swedes -- one in every 26 of a population of 8.9
million -- are getting sick pay from the National Social Insurance Board,
a third for longer than a year. An additional 470,000 are on disability
pensions -- early-retirement benefits paid by the government to those who
stop working before the retirement age of 65. These often are bigger than
regular pensions.
Sick Swedes -- and what makes them sick -- are one of the main election
issues.
The governing center-left Social Democratic Party, seeking to extend an
eight-year spell in office, has commissioned studies and written reports
saying job conditions are getting harder and more stressful.
Opponents, led by the center-right Moderate and Christian Democratic
parties, say the government is looking for a cure in all the wrong places.
The problem, they say, is not workers' health but cushy welfare policies
that are eroding the work ethic.
Whatever the explanation, the cost -- about $12 billion a year, or 16
percent of this year's national budget -- worries officials.
"I don't think we can accept any higher costs. Then we risk having to
change compensation levels and the sickness insurance loses its function
and legitimacy," said Rolf Lundgren, chief economic analyst at the
National Social Insurance Board, which picks up the tab from the employer
after a worker's second week of absence due to sickness.
Sweden has long been viewed by many as a model welfare state,
characterized by high taxes, extensive government benefits and a
relatively small gap between rich and poor.
Although social benefits were scaled back somewhat during a recession in
the mid-1990s, subsidized health care and compensation pay for
unemployment or parental leave. The system is financed by some of the
highest taxes in the world on income, wealth, property and purchases.
Sick leave amounts to 80 percent of a worker's pay. The maximum benefit is
623 kronor a day, or about $65. After taxes that adds up to about $1,500 a
month -- about what many workers get for four 40-hour weeks.
Sick leave pay is subject to income tax, which ranges from 30 to 60
percent.
Workers who have taken time off contend the pressures and strains of the
job are legitimate reasons for going on sick leave.
"The wheels are spinning too quickly," said Anna Eriksson, 29, a nurse who
took off for two months last year, calling herself burned out. "The
working environment simply has become tougher. You have to do twice the
work you did before."
Anbritt Ludvigsson, a 60-year-old payroll administrator who has been on
paid leave for 18 months, said a combination of family problems and a
heavy work load disabled her.
"I couldn't log onto the computer. I had forgotten everything," she
recalled, struggling to hold back tears.
Opponents of the generous policies say that paid sick leave has come to be
seen as an entitlement rather than a benefit and that frivolous claims are
partly to blame for the abrupt rise in sick leave since 1997, when only
about 170,000 Swedes received payments.
Swedes "need to be pampered, placed on treadmills and surrounded by fruit
baskets to cope with work," book publisher Helena Riviere wrote in an
opinion article for the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet.
Riviere said the generous leave policies invite people to abuse the system
by calling in sick simply because they're "fed up with work or
dissatisfied with their lives in general."
A recent survey of 2,000 Swedes by the polling institute Temo found that
60 percent believe it's acceptable to call in sick for reasons other than
illness -- for family problems or stress, for example.
"If people continue using sickness compensation like this, there won't be
much left over for those who really are sick," said Eric Jannerfeldt, a
spokesman for the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise, which represents
employers.
The business group estimates the value of lost man-hours at $16 billion a
year.
Economists Magnus Henrekson and Mats Persson say the high sick pay may be
part of the problem. In an article for an academic journal, they linked
variations in sick leave during the past five decades to changes in the
compensation system.
Their theory doesn't explain why sick leave numbers started growing in
1997 after a steady decline in most of the '90s. But Henrekson and Persson
note the surge intensified in 1998 after the Social Democratic government
raised compensation levels to 80 percent of wages from 75 percent.
"One thing is certain. When you raise compensation levels, more people
take advantage of the system," Henrekson said.
Sick leave also is high in neighboring Norway, which has higher
compensation than Sweden, but it is lower in Denmark and Finland, where
compensation is lower. Other European countries report lower rates than
Sweden, but direct comparisons are difficult because of variations in
data.
Labor Minister Mona Sahlin blames the problem on too much work being done
by too few workers. She says job cuts and restructuring throughout the
Swedish economy during a recession in the early 1990s increased the
strains on workers.
Other experts concur that an aging work force, economic globalization and
public sector cutbacks explain some of the surge in sick leave claims.
Still, Sweden remains a world leader in labor safety and social welfare.
Most employees have a 40-hour week -- and get overtime if they work more
-- and the law guarantees five weeks of vacation a year.
Work-related deaths are among the lowest in the world, and workplace
safety is closely monitored. Life expectancy has increased over the last
decade by 2.5 years for men, to 76.9, and by 1.6 years for women, to 81.8.
"They really take care of you here," said Samantha Budd, a British
researcher who works for drug maker AstraZeneca in Soedertaelje, south of
Stockholm. Her move to Sweden from the United States allowed her more time
off, a slower work pace and ergonomic office furniture tailored to her
body.
"If it has slipped in standards, what was there before? It's hard to
imagine," she said.

August 26, 2002.
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