Thursday, April 24, 2025

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BYD breaks sales record – could take over the lead from Tesla

Published 1 January 2024
– By Editorial Staff
BYD's Destroyer 07 model at Auto Shanghai 2023.

In China, BYD, one of the leading manufacturers of electric cars, has set a new sales record in the fourth quarter of 2023 with over 526 000 electric cars sold. This success, reported to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, challenges Tesla, which has long dominated the electric car market.

Tesla is expected to report a delivery of 473,000 cars in the same period, according to data from LSEG. While Tesla still holds a strong position in the US, BYD’s success highlights the growing competition in the electric vehicle industry and the potential for changes in market leadership.

Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, has focused on increasing the company’s deliveries, but it faces challenges such as price pressure and regulatory changes. BYD’s sales success is a clear sign of the rapid development and increasing competition in the electric vehicle sector, indicating an intense future for the industry.

Monday’s figures also show that BYD sold a total of over 3 million cars in 2023.

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IMF chief: World economic order is being reshaped

Published today 10:02
– By Editorial Staff
The IMF says that current tariff levels are unprecedented since the Great Depression.

The international economic order is undergoing a complete transformation due to increased uncertainty over US trade policy, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The global economic system under which most countries have operated for the last 80 years is being reset, ushering the world into a new era”, writes IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas.

While Donald Trump has imposed sweeping trade restrictions and tariffs, the influential organization has lowered its global growth forecast, predicting in its latest report that world growth will fall to 2.8% down from 3.3% last year.

Existing rules are challenged while new ones are yet to emerge”, Gourinchas continues, describing how tariffs today are at levels not seen since the Great Depression that began in the 1920s.

He argues that the sudden tariff increases and broader policy uncertainty could significantly slow global growth going forward and has lowered the forecast for US growth to a weak 1.8% from 2.8% in 2023 and predicts further stagnation next year.

145% tariffs against China

US trading partners such as Mexico, Canada and China are also expected to be hit, according to the report with Chinese growth falling to around 4% due to attempts to counteract US tariffs. Most EU economies are also expected to grow much more slowly than before.

What Trump has done is impose a blanket 10% tariff on almost all imports from around the world as well as tariffs of at least 145% on Chinese goods. Additional tariffs have also been introduced against many other countries but these have been paused until July, and in the meantime new trade deals are being negotiated.

The Trump administration argues that previous trade deals have been unfavorable to the US and that the country has been economically exploited in various ways and that the tariffs should restore some form of fairness. Anyone who responds by raising tariffs against the US can expect even higher trade tariffs as punishment.

“Desolate mood”

The uncertainty and volatility that has characterized the trade war, and the fact that no one seems to really know what happens next, is described as having been crucial to the shaking of the world economy.

The IMF report is officially presented this week in connection with the organization’s spring meeting in Washington, and the Swedish Minister of Finance Elisabeth Svantesson is in attendance.

– The mood is desolate. A lot has changed in just a few months, she says, and believes that the reality has become worse than first predicted.

– Around the world, we can now expect growth to slow down. This affects the US, Sweden, but also the poorer countries that are so dependent on free trade. This is causing the foundations to shake a lot, the Minister continues.

Swedish economics students can’t do basic math

Published 20 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Many economics students at colleges and universities don’t understand things they should have learned back in middle school.

Many economics students at higher education institutions in Sweden today lack basic foundational knowledge in mathematics – and are unable to do things they should have already learned in lower secondary school.

Experts warn that students’ inadequate skills pose a security risk – as sensitive tasks have to be carried out in other countries instead.

Over the weekend, professors and teachers at five Swedish universities raised the alarm that the country’s economics students don’t understand math – they can’t round correctly, convert decimals to percentages or calculate fractions. Many are also said to lack a basic understanding of the subject, and are unable to recognize when or why they have made mistakes.

As a result, educators have been forced to lower standards in subjects such as business administration and spend considerable resources trying to explain arithmetic and other fundamentals – taking time away from much more important matters.

Ultimately, this degeneration means that Swedish financial accounting needs to be done in other countries – because the knowledge may no longer exist in Sweden.

Becoming dependent on other countries

Christina Östberg, professor of business administration at Karlstad University, is highly critical and believes that the low level of knowledge in practice poses a serious security risk for Sweden.

– It’s not really good for any party that we’re passing on sensitive information. It is not good that it goes across the country’s borders, she says in an interview with the state radio SR.

– It’s a security risk, and we’re seeing it in many areas and questioning it. If we become dependent on other states, there’s a risk that the connection could be cut. What happens then?

Targeted efforts are needed

She notes that even ordinary individuals should be able to calculate basic things like VAT or discounts when they shop and that economists must of course be even better at this.

Östberg notes that some financial tasks are already being carried out by companies based abroad and says this increases the risk of sensitive data falling into the wrong hands.

This is also expected to become more common if nothing changes, and to increase knowledge levels, she wants to see major investments in business education at colleges and universities but also earlier efforts aimed at primary and secondary school students.

Fast charging electric cars now more expensive than gas in Sweden

Published 18 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff

In Sweden, fast charging of electric cars at public stations has become more expensive than refueling with gasoline, according to a recent calculation. However, home charging is still cheaper than gasoline.

It is Privata Affärer that has compared the costs of driving 10 kilometers with an electric car versus a gasoline car. The calculation is based on a gasoline car consuming 0.7 liters of gasoline per 10 kilometers and an electric car consuming 2 kilowatt-hours per 10 kilometers.

At current prices, fast charging at public stations costs 11.38 SEK per 10 kilometers, while gasoline refueling costs 11.02 SEK per 10 kilometers.

This means that fast charging can currently be more expensive than gasoline. This type of charging is mainly used during longer trips or when a quick top-up is needed, while home charging is the most common and cost-effective option for most electric car owners.

Home charging still cheaper

The calculation shows that home charging an electric car is significantly cheaper, with a cost about 75 percent lower than the per-kilometer cost of a gasoline car.

At the same time, costs are affected by several factors, including driving style, outdoor temperature, and the fuel consumption of different car models. Electricity prices also vary depending on the time and provider, meaning the cost of home charging can vary significantly depending on where in the country you live and when you charge the car.

Swedish government: Unprecedented economic turbulence ahead

Published 15 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Elisabeth Svantesson during Tuesday's press conference.

Elisabeth Svantesson, the Moderate Party’s Minister for Finance, believes that Trump’s trade tariffs and the unrest they have caused will also affect the Swedish economy.

– We had good conditions for getting the economy going. But then this happened, which we’ve talked about a lot – the trade war has materialized, she emphasizes.

According to Svantesson, the Swedish economy was recovering at the end of 2024 but this recovery has now been interrupted, and the Americans are being blamed.

The finance minister says that confidence in the US has been badly damaged and will take a long time to rebuild and that the Trump administration’s actions have damaged both the US and European economies.

It is sad that one of Sweden’s partners, the United States, is acting in this way, she said:

– What we are experiencing now is unprecedented. We have a trade war at a time when markets are highly integrated.

“Higher costs for businesses and households”

Although the finance minister admits that the consequences of the trade war are difficult to determine in advance, she nevertheless maintains that Sweden remains strong “with world-class public finances” and the focus of the spring budget, according to Svantesson, is on getting “the wheels turning” through various economic measures such as increased tax deductions and increased funding for the Swedish Public Employment Service.

We don’t know all the consequences of the trade war yet, but we know that it is harmful… But with this budget we are protecting Sweden, and we are prepared to do more, she adds.

Despite the SEK 11.5 billion (€1 billion) in measures, unemployment is predicted to rise from 8.2% today to 8.6% by the end of the year, and inflation to 2.5%, from 1.9% previously.

The Ministry of Finance expects Sweden’s GDP to grow by 2.1% in 2025 lower than previous estimates. However, growth is expected to pick up in 2026 and 2027, according to the forecast, which may be revised in the future.

The announcement of increased import tariffs in the United States has caused turbulence in financial markets and sharp stock market declines. Higher tariffs are expected to lead to higher costs for businesses and households, which is expected to dampen demand. At the same time, increased uncertainty itself risks dampening economic activity as firms and households postpone investments, hiring and purchases”, the assessment says.

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