Sweden's Recovery Gives Our Economy, ETFs Some Hope | ETF Trends

When it comes to life’s lessons, markets and exchange traded funds (ETFs) in the United States may have a lot to learn from Sweden.

The parallels are uncanny: a banking system in crisis after a housing bubble collapse, job losses, a government struggling to keep its country’s inhabitants strong while working to ease the crisis. Sweden had it all, and so do we.

In fact, in 1992, Sweden’s economy was so far down a hole that the banking system was almost obsolete. Short-sighted economic policy mixed with a property boom were to blame. Sweden did something differently than what Washington is gearing up to do, though, and experts warn we may have a lot of lessons to learn from Sweden.

Sweden did not have the government bail out banks, bad debts or financial institutions. Shareholders suffered a bit and banks wrote down losses while issuing warrants to the government, reports Carter Dougherty for the New York Times.