Sweden, once among the countries most eager to import asylum seekers and other migrants en masse, is recording more people emigrating than immigrating for the first time in 50 years. The center-right government, led by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson of the Moderate Party and supported by the populist Sweden Democrats, has released figures that appear to show historically low levels of new asylum claims.
“The number of asylum applications is heading towards a historically low level, asylum-related residence permits continue to decrease, and for the first time in 50 years, Sweden has net emigration,” lawmaker Maria Malmer Stenergard said. A United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) representative to the Nordic and Baltic countries, Annika Sandlund, backed up the claim, complaining the statistics appear to show an outflow of migrants.
However, Sweden’s statistics agency, the SCB, is more cautious, warning it is not yet possible to confirm a net outflow from January to May of this year.
Skeptics say the statistics are false, resulting from the Swedish Tax Registry clearing its books of people who have already left the country since summer. This could be making it seem that people left during that period when they actually left the country months or even years prior but remained on the tax register.
Sweden has issues with migrants continuing to claim welfare benefits despite leaving the country, which could keep them on the register.
If the figures are accurate, however, they would be a success for the anti-mass migration Sweden Democrats, who have previously floated ideas to strip naturalized immigrants who refuse to integrate their citizenship, among other measures.