Posted on July 30, 2007

Swedes: integration is not working

In Malmö, 20 percent said it was easy to find good, reasonably-priced housing, while 74 percent disagreed

Sweden is bad at integrating immigrants - that’s the view of Swedes themselves, according to a new Europe-wide survey.

The Eurobarometer survey interviewed 500 residents in each of 75 European cities to get their opinions on their home towns. In Sweden, the survey covered Stockholm and Malmö. The survey rated Sweden as one of the worst places at integrating foreigners and one of the places where it is hardest to find reasonably-priced housing.

In Malmö, only 12 percent said that foreigners who live there are well-integrated; 83 percent said they were not. A similar story was told in Stockholm, where 78 people disagreed with the statement that foreigners who live in the city were well-integrated.

No other city in Europe was more negative to the integration of immigrants; next most negative were Berlin, Vienna and Graz, while inhabitants of cities in Romania, Hungary and Poland were most satisfied with integration.

Another source of dissatisfaction was housing. Asked whether it was easy to find good housing at a reasonable price, 88 percent of Stockholmers said it was not, while only 8 percent said it was. This makes Stockholm residents more negative about housing availability than people living in Rome, London, Amsterdam or Copenhagen. Only six cities were more negative: Paris, Luxembourg, Dublin, Bucharest, Bratislava and Munich.

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Swedes: integration is not working
The Local, News from Sweden in English

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