Page:CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090018-7.pdf/42

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090018-7


FIGURE 19. Balance of payments (U/OU) (Millions of U.S. dollars)
1967 1968 1969 1970 1971[1]
Overall balance -41 -16 -350 128 291
Current account -47 116 -211 -334 189
Trade balance (exports minus imports) -149 -181 183 -207 407
Services (net) 186 167 126 35 -27
Freight and other transportation 403 448 452 478 466
Unilateral transfers (net) -84 -102 -154 -162 191
Nonmonetary sector capital account 120 111 -50 236 22
Direct investment -10 64 -88 -93 -97
Other private long-term capital 110 71 102 297 172
Private short-term capital[2] 26 -13 -15 78 -26
Central government borrowing -6 11 18 -46 -33
Allocations of SDR's ... ... ... 41 38
Net errors and omissions[2] 114 -11 ... 185 42
Monetary sector accounts[3] 41 16 350 128 291
Central institutions (net) 210 17 151 ... na
Monetary gold 0 24 1 28 na
SDR holdings ... ... ... 41 38
IMF General Account position 29 -28 68 27 na
Foreign exchange 172 78 61 -30 na
Private institutions (net) -169 -1 199 -84 na


Substantial amounts of medium-term and long-term credits are usually extended in connection with the financing of Sweden's growing exports of capital goods.


3. Foreign aid (S)

IN 1968, the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development recommended that developed countries extend development aid (official and private) to less developed countries in an amount that, by 1975, would be equal to 1% of each donor country's GNP. Sweden, however, adopted a more ambitious goal, in that it agreed to exclude private aid from the computation and to extend official aid equal to 1% of its GNP. It is not likely, however, that Sweden will achieve this goal until the late 1970's. By virtue of successive increases in aid appropriations, the Swedish official aid budget has grown from about 0.2% of the GNP in FY68 to 0.6% in FY72 and is estimated at 0.7% in FY73. The 25% increase in total aid budgeted for FY73 is largely concentrated in bilateral aid, as shown below, in millions of U.S. dollars:

FY72 FY73 (proposed)
Multilateral aid 88.4 101.0
Bilateral aid 127.8 166.5
Grants 72.9 na
Credits 54.9 na
Administration, recruitment, and information 7.1 11.0
Total 223.3 279.4

Since 1968 the general tendency has been towards more nonproject bilateral aid for specified economic sectors. Multilateral aid, although rising, has been gradually declining as a share of the total since the mid-1960's and now accounts for about 40% of the total. Official bilateral credits are extended without being tied to imports from Sweden. Standard terms are 25-year maturity, 10-year grace period, and 2%


35


APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090018-7

  1. Estimated.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Most short-term trade credits and changes in certain other private short-term assets and liabilities are included in "Net errors and omissions."
  3. Net increases in Bank of Sweden and commercial bank foreign assets are debits and decreases are credits.