The Tidö parties want to investigate whether new arrivals should automatically have access to social benefits and grants.

Among other things, parental allowance, child support and multi-child allowance are identified as benefits that can be limited.

In SVT's 30 minutes, Migration Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard says that you should not be able to stack contributions on top of each other.

Benefits linked to citizenship

There are also plans in the Tidö Agreement to go a step further and limit access to welfare benefits, such as child support, for people who are not Swedish citizens.

Maria Malmer Stenergard believes that the issue should be investigated and, among other things, look at whether it will be possible to qualify for certain benefits at a later date than it does today.

- My ambition is that more should be required for you to be able to take part in Swedish welfare, it is also my ambition that Swedish citizenship should mean more, exactly where the borders will be and what is possible according to EU law those who know more than I will get to investigate.

Critical to undemanding integration policy

Children born abroad are often among the most economically vulnerable in society.

Maria Malmer Stenergard does not believe that a changed regulatory framework will lead to more children growing up in poverty, but believes that the parents' abilities must also be taken into account.

- I am fully convinced that the undemanding integration policy we have had, which has meant that you get grants regardless of how much effort you have put in, leads to exclusion to a much greater extent than if you actually dare to make demands, she says.