Advertisement

Norwegians can't stand in line - Swedish poll

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
Norwegians can't stand in line - Swedish poll
Photo: Björn Tesch

A Swedish newspaper poll has indicated that a majority of Swedes feel that Norwegians are unable to master the art of standing in line nor possess the ability to navigate a roundabout.

Advertisement

In a show of neighbourly discord, a majority of Swedes polled by a tabloid Thursday said they thought Norwegians were poor
at queueing amid a host of other gripes.

Of the more than 3,800 people who responded to the question "Are Norwegians bad at queuing?" on the Expressen web site, 59 percent said "yes, very", while
only eight percent answered "no, they excel at it."

The poll comes after a sociological study on Swedish border residents found Swedes to be increasingly annoyed with their wealthier neighbours.

"It's surprising how many negative things" Swedes have to say about Norwegians, the author of the study, Eva Olsson, told the Swedish press agency TT.

Swedes were once accustomed to saving pennies by buying their butter and cream across the border, but the tables have since turned, with Norway growing
richer thanks to its oil and gas exports.

Swedes now feel flooded by Norwegians, Olsson said in an interview on Swedish public radio. She said she worried the antagonism in border areas would degenerate into a social crisis.

Poor queue etiquette aside, the Swedes also have other bones to pick with their neighbours.

They claim Norwegians "don't know how to drive at roundabouts, they park in handicapped areas... are immoral and buy lots of tobacco and alcohol,"
according to accounts from the study, quoted by Expressen.

In 2011, Norwegians spent 11.5 billion Norwegian kroner ($1.9 billion) in Sweden in 2011, according to Swedish official data.

"We'd be poor were it not for the Norwegians," press agency TT said.

More

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also