Mikael Sjöberg new head of the Swedish Public Employment Service

The Swedish Public Employment Service has a new Director-General. Mikael Sjöberg comes from the post as Director-General at the Swedish Work Environment Authority. The Employment Service’s former head was fired in August last year.

When Mikael Sjöberg was introduced at a press conference on 27
February he said “trust” was the most important issue for the Public
Employment Service.

The state authority has been criticised for not getting more people
into work. The day before Sjöberg’s appointment, the Employment Service
called in 61,000 people in error for an information meeting meant for
1,400. The result: chaos at Tunnelgatan in central Stockholm.

It is hard to paint a clearer picture of how many people are looking
for jobs and of a failing authority.

Now Mikael Sjöberg wants to get to grips with the problems and
opportunities. 

“I feel proud and humble. It is a large and complex authority I am
now about to head. It is a meaningful yet challenging task,” he
says.

Sweden tops Nordic unemployment tables with 8.6 percent. 

“Mikael Sjöberg’s long and broad experience from leading positions
in Swedish public administration will be valuable for the work the
Public Employment Service will continue to do in order to get more
people into jobs and to allow more employers to hire,” says the
Minister for Employment.

Mikael Sjöberg is 46. From 1994 he worked as a government civil
servant. In 2005 he took on the job as Director-General of the
then National Institute for Working Life. Two years later he became
Director-General of the Swedish Work Environment Authority. He is
a cousin of former Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson.