Sweden: Financial institutions development, access

* indicates monthly or quarterly data series
 Sweden

Financial institutions development, access

 Latest value 0.259
 Year 2021
 Measure index points
 Data availability 1980 - 2021
 Average 0.361
 Min - Max 0.259 - 0.467
 Source International Monetary Fund
The latest value from 2021 is 0.259 index points, a decline from 0.287 index points in 2020. In comparison, the world average is 0.363 index points, based on data from 175 countries. Historically, the average for Sweden from 1980 to 2021 is 0.361 index points. The minimum value, 0.259 index points, was reached in 2021 while the maximum of 0.467 index points was recorded in 2008. See the global rankings for that indicator or use the country comparator to compare trends over time.
Select indicator
* indicates monthly or quarterly data series


Recent data
Sweden - Financial institutions development, access - Recent values chart

Historical series
Sweden - Financial institutions development, access - historical chart - 1980-2021




Definition: Measures access to financial services as a principal component of the following two variables: Bank branches per 100,000 adults and ATMs per 100,000 adults. See Svirydzenka, Katsiaryna (IMF, 2016) for more detail.

Selected articles from our guide:

What factors determine the exchange rates

International lending and sovereign debt

All articles



 Related indicators Latest Reference Measure
 Financial development 0.775 2021 index points
 Financial institutions development 0.739 2021 index points
 Financial institutions development, depth 0.999 2021 index points
 Financial institutions development, access 0.259 2021 index points
 Financial institutions development, efficiency 0.714 2021 index points
 Financial markets development 0.781 2021 index points
 Financial markets development, depth 0.935 2021 index points
 Financial markets development, access 0.500 2021 index points
 Financial markets development, efficiency 0.845 2021 index points
This site uses cookies.
Learn more here


OK