Reed NewsReed News

Hofors Municipality Pauses Investments Amid Unexpected Population Decline

Economy & businessEconomy
Key Points
  • Hofors Municipality is pausing investments to save over six million kronor due to unexpected population decline.
  • Population decrease is approximately 100 people worse than the projected 45-person decline for 2026.
  • Budget cuts affect association support, maintenance, technology investments, and various community services.

Hofors Municipality in Sweden is implementing significant budget cuts, pausing various investments to save over six million kronor, according to reports from SVT Gävleborg. The austerity measures come in response to an unexpected population decline that is worse than previously projected.

In November of last year, new population forecasts for 2026 were presented showing that while officials had anticipated a decrease of 45 residents, the actual decline is approximately 100 more people than expected. This sharper-than-anticipated population drop is negatively impacting municipal revenues.

the removal of train lines connecting Storvik, Sandviken, and Gävle is making commuting difficult and affecting communication infrastructure

Tomas Isaksson, chairman of the municipal board

Tomas Isaksson (S), chairman of the municipal board, cited transportation challenges as a contributing factor, stating that the removal of train lines connecting Storvik, Sandviken, and Gävle is making commuting difficult and affecting communication infrastructure.

The municipality is now pausing or partially pausing several investments including association support, maintenance, drug-free school graduation events, technology investments, and work shoes. Specific cuts include completely pausing expanded association support (600,000 kr), development funds/projects (800,000 kr), technology investments (200,000 kr), detailed planning (500,000 kr), maintenance operating grants (1,000,000 kr), and work shoes (200,000 kr). Additional partial pauses affect individual roads, archivist positions, rental and coaching services, and cultural collaboration projects.

Transparency

How we verified this article

UnconfirmedBased on 1 sources
1 sources2 Involved