DEI as a Competitive Edge: Swedish Firms Double-Down While U.S. Retreats

As the Trump administration issues executive orders to curb or dismantle federal and corporate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, Swedish boardrooms are moving in the opposite direction. From H&M and Ericsson to fast-growing scale-ups such as Northvolt and Klarna, companies are reaffirming DEI targets, tying executive bonuses to progress and arguing—publicly and privately—that inclusive practices are now a source of Nordic competitive advantage.

The Macro Lens

“Sweden is not the United States,” says Tawar Dabaghi, general secretary of RFSL, Sweden’s largest LGBTQI+ rights organisation. Dabaghi’s inbox is filled with invitations from corporate partners asking for updated training modules and new metrics for 2026. “We see a positive trend line. The business case for DEI—talent retention, innovation, brand trust—has only strengthened in the last 12 months.”

Evidence is visible in the numbers. A June 2025 survey by the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce found that 73 % of large Swedish firms (turnover > SEK 2 billion) have expanded DEI budgets this year, compared with just 12 % that have trimmed them. The most cited driver was “need for specialised talent” (68 %), followed by “export-market brand value” (51 %).

Case Study: Ericsson

Ericsson’s chief people officer, Åse Holmberg, tells Nordic Business Journal the telecom-equipment giant has integrated DEI metrics into its supplier-code audits and 5G R&D performance reviews. “Diverse teams filed 17 % more patent applications per capita last year,” Holmberg notes. “That is not a feel-good figure; it is a line-item in our IP monetisation forecast.”

The issue of DEI swept the USA led by Donald Trump which meant that women of black origin and homosexuals should not be given access. Swedish and Nordic firms were pressure to adopt related policies| Ganileys

The Migrant Paradox

Yet the same executives who champion DEI concede a stubborn blind spot: network-based hiring. Sweden’s labour market continues to run on informal referrals; 56 % of all engineering roles in 2024 were filled through personal contacts, according to Statistics Sweden (SCB). The result is a paradox: companies trumpet inclusive values while struggling to absorb the country’s highly educated migrant population.

OECD data show that non-EU migrants with tertiary degrees are twice as likely to be over-qualified for their roles in Sweden as the OECD average. “We risk creating a two-tier economy—dynamic firms that preach inclusion but hire from the same alumni circles,” warns Louise Dane, labour-market economist at the Nordic Council.

Policy & Practice Fixes

The government’s “Step-in-jobs” and “New Start Jobs” subsidies have had limited uptake; only 9 % of eligible companies used them in 2024. Instead, firms themselves are piloting new fixes:

  • Mentorship marketplaces. Spotify and Klarna launched an open-source platform in May where mid-career migrants are matched with senior engineers for six-month rotations. Early data show a 38 % conversion rate to permanent hires. 
  • Blind résumé 2.0. Saab has begun stripping not only names but also university names from CVs, focusing instead on skill certifications verified by blockchain credentials. 
  • Inclusion-index bonuses. H&M now ties 15 % of divisional leadership bonuses to an annual inclusion index that weighs migrant promotion rates and pay-equity gaps.

Investor Pressure

Nordic institutional investors are adding momentum. Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) and Sweden’s AP-funds have placed 34 Swedish companies “under observation” for lagging DEI progress, threatening divestment by 2027 if boards cannot demonstrate measurable change.

Looking Ahead

The next battleground is AI-driven recruitment. With Swedish start-ups exporting HR-tech tools worldwide, regulators are debating new transparency rules to ensure algorithms do not replicate existing referral networks. The Ministry of Employment is expected to release a white paper this autumn proposing a “right to explanation” for any candidate rejected by automated systems.

Bottom Line

While U.S. multinationals weigh legal risks and political backlash, Swedish companies are treating DEI as a growth lever. Their biggest obstacle is no longer external pressure but internal culture: breaking the clubby networks that quietly determine who gets the job interview. Solve that, executives say, and Sweden’s export champions can turn social values into hard currency—at home and abroad.

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