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How many Swedish Kronas are out there?

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PEZ posted on Fri, Feb 19 2010 3:51 AM

I wonder if anyone of you know how I can get information on the amount of "money" in circulation in my country (Sweden). I'm trying to figure out how similar our Riksbank is to the U.S. Federal Reserve. Ideally I want to get a picture of how, technically, Swedish interest rates are being controlled. I suspect that our Riksbank somehow creates money out of thin air and then lend it out to our banks.

I just don't know where to start. Any ideas?

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Answered (Verified) PEZ replied on Mon, Mar 1 2010 3:15 AM

This seems to answer the question:

From http://www.riksbank.se/templates/Page.aspx?id=26804 The page is in Swedish and there they report the money supply as a percentage of GDP for some reason. But the Excel-file is in both Swedish and English and has no GDP-percentaging.

Something seem to happen at the end of WWII?

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PEZ replied on Sun, Feb 21 2010 7:37 AM

I think some of the information is here: http://www.riksbank.com/swedishstat/ or at least if one follows the right links there.

But I can't seem to find info going back a few decennia and also I do not really understand the figures. Like what M1, M2 and M3 is and such.

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Answered (Verified) PEZ replied on Mon, Mar 1 2010 3:15 AM

This seems to answer the question:

From http://www.riksbank.se/templates/Page.aspx?id=26804 The page is in Swedish and there they report the money supply as a percentage of GDP for some reason. But the Excel-file is in both Swedish and English and has no GDP-percentaging.

Something seem to happen at the end of WWII?

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Did Sweden get off the gold standard around that time?

"I don't believe in ghosts, sermons, or stories about money" - Rooster Cogburn, True Grit.
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PEZ replied on Mon, Mar 1 2010 2:18 PM

It seems that Sweden abandoned the gold standard 1931. Maybe it took the government a while to start utilizing the power of paper?

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