Uswidi
Nchi au eneoHakuna mshahara wa chini wa kisheria wa kitaifaChunguza jinsi mshahara wa chini unavyolinganishwa na bei za Big Mac nchini Uswidi, na ni baga ngapi unaweza kupata kwa saa 1 ya kazi.
Uswidi dhidi ya dunia
Jinsi Uswidi inavyolinganishwa na nchi na maeneo mengine.
Jinsi tunavyokokotoa baga kwa saa
Nafasi za jirani
Shiriki matokeo haya
Waonyeshe marafiki zako saa moja ya kazi inavyofikia.
Mshahara wa chini (kabla ya makato)
Chanzo: WageIndicator.org - Minimum Wages Regulations Sweden (cross-checked with Eurofound and Swedish National Mediation Office, Medlingsinstitutet) · inatumika 19 Jun 2026
WageIndicator.org - Minimum Wages Regulations Sweden (cross-checked with Eurofound and Swedish National Mediation Office, Medlingsinstitutet)Sweden has NO statutory national minimum wage. WageIndicator states verbatim: "Sweden has no national legislation concerning minimum wages." This is the Nordic/Swedish ("Ghent") model: wage floors are set contractually through SECTORAL collective agreements between trade unions and employer organisations, not by statute. These agreements cover roughly 90% of employees, exceeding the EU Minimum Wage Directive's 80% collective-bargaining coverage threshold. Of ~700 collective agreements, fewer than 250 specify explicit minimum wage levels (mainly LO blue-collar unions and Unionen); minimum-wage floors are most binding in retail and hospitality. Rates vary by sector, seniority (separate lower rates for under-18s), and four blue-collar skill groups, so there is no single national figure. No authoritative source publishes one canonical statutory number; entry-level negotiated floors are reported by secondary sources to cluster around SEK 24,000-26,000/month, but this is a de facto contractual range, not a statutory rate, so wage fields are left null per the no-invention rule. effective_date reflects the as-of verification date (situation is long-standing, not a dated change). Set basis='no_minimum' because there is genuinely no STATUTORY minimum; sectoral figures exist only via collective bargaining.
Bei ya Big Mac: The Economist · 1 Jan 2026