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In a few weeks the budget for this year’s fall will be presented. Dagens Industri experiences that all figures and tables are ready.
Finance Minister Magdalena Andersson does not want to go into detail, but says she is satisfied with the main approach.
– Nothing is ready until everything is ready, but I am sure we will come up with a set that is good for Sweden. It is a budget of historic proportions, he tells the newspaper.
Taxes must have been harder to agree, according to Dagens Industri. The Center Party has advocated cutting employer contributions, while the Liberals have demanded reduced corporate taxes, but both have wanted reduced taxes, especially for low- and middle-income people.
The Finance Minister is said to be introducing major tax cuts.
Magdalena Andersson herself tells Dagens Industri that most of the investments in the budget are temporary, as are the new tax cuts that have yet to be announced in the January deal. In addition, it will present permanent cuts in taxes on employment and entrepreneurship, linked to the January agreement.
In DN’s experience, these are more extensive investments in wellness and investments than in tax cuts.
DN has been applied Magdalena Andersson for a comment.
– We will not give more comments than what we have already made to Dagens Industri, says the press secretary of the finance minister, Johan Ekström.
The Center Party’s economic policy spokesman, Emil Källström, does not want to comment on the Dagens Industri information.
– This is a work in progress and nothing is done until everything is done. The different parts and the entire budget will be communicated in the near future, he tells Dagens Nyheter.
The Green Party’s economic policy spokesperson, Karolina Skog, salutes through her press spokesperson that the party will not comment on the information on Tuesday night. Liberals also do not want to comment on the budget negotiations, says the party’s press service.
The text is updated