Letter What UK Could Learn From Sweden’s Equity Markets

News Editor
2 Min Read

Sweden: Siltanews – News Desk
Historically, the UK is much under­in­ves­ted in equit­ies. Just 8 per cent of Bri­tons invest dir­ectly — the aver­age across the G7 is twice that, while in the US it is four times higher. This is partly thanks to our love of prop­erty, but also down to a cul­tural pre­dis­pos­i­tion towards cash sav­ings.

 And yet we know that cash is at risk from infla­tion, while stocks and shares have out­per­formed cash in nine out of 10 dec­ades over the last cen­tury.

Set­ting lim­its by itself is unlikely to drive mean­ing­ful cul­tural change. However, a blue­print does exist for achiev­ing it. From the mid-1980s, a series of gov­ern­ment ini­ti­at­ives in Sweden led to Swedish equity mar­kets becom­ing among the best capitalized in the world.

 Today, around 80 per cent of Swedes are dir­ectly inves­ted into equit­ies funds. This has set a vir­tu­ous circle in motion; the typ­ical saver has had 7.7 per cent com­pound annual growth on aver­age over the last couple of dec­ades, while com­pan­ies — espe­cially in high-growth indus­tries like innov­a­tion and tech­no­logy — have access to envi­able fund­ing levels.

The Swedish gov­ern­ment did this through favorable tax treat­ment, a strong reg­u­lat­ory frame­work, improved fin­an­cial edu­ca­tion and — cru­cially — apply­ing lighter restric­tions on fin­an­cial advice.

This is one thing that could be dir­ectly emu­lated here. Cur­rent advice rules — which rightly aim to pro­tect cus­tom­ers — have the unin­ten­ded con­sequence that banks can’t tell you when you are bet­ter off put­ting spare cash in a fund rather than a sav­ings account. Our rig­or­ous legis­la­tion, des­pite the best inten­tions, means all invest­ing is seen as a specialized, per­haps risky, prac­tice best left to pro­fes­sion­als.

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *