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uppsving

Uppsving is a Swedish term used to describe a phase in the business cycle when economic activity begins to improve after a downturn. During an uppsving, indicators such as real GDP growth, employment, industrial production, and consumer spending typically strengthen. Confidence among households and firms tends to recover, supporting higher investment and demand. The duration and intensity of an upswing vary; it may progress into a boom if demand accelerates, or it may slow if supply constraints or policy tightening curb growth.

Etymology and usage: The word combines upp (up) and sving (swing or turning). It is common in

Indicators and drivers: Typical signals include positive quarterly GDP growth, falling unemployment, rising hours worked, and

Relation to the cycle: An uppsving follows a recession or stagnation and serves as the initial recovery

Swedish
economic
reporting,
central-bank
communications,
and
political
discourse
to
denote
a
positive,
turning
point
in
the
economy.
increasing
capacity
utilization.
Financing
conditions,
wage
growth,
and
consumer
confidence
often
improve
during
an
uppsving.
Drivers
may
include
recovering
domestic
demand,
export
growth,
inventory
rebuilding,
and
supportive
monetary
or
fiscal
policy.
The
pace
of
an
uppsving
depends
on
domestic
fundamentals
and
global
conditions,
and
it
can
be
followed
by
either
further
expansion
or
a
return
to
slower
growth
if
imbalances
emerge.
phase
in
the
broader
business
cycle.
Policy
makers
monitor
it
to
balance
sustaining
growth
with
avoiding
overheating.