Which is funny because the only thorough investigation with remotely current information was published late last year and that report concluded that there is too little evidence to support any strong conclusions about the success--or total failure--of the school reform, while also pointing out some of the problems that have cropped up. The govt. has recently instated a commission tasked with investigating these matters; we have news reports to work with in the meantime. For the sake of simplicity I'll refer to all schools not run by state/municipal/county as "private", although there's really a wide range of owners.
http://www.dn.se/nyheter/politik/bjo...r-om-friskolor
Minister of education criticises private schools for failing to provide school libraries, school nurses and counselors. (law was or is being changed to fix this problem)
http://www.dn.se/sthlm/fa-elever-ger-kris-pa-friskolor
Not even half of the 120 privately run highschools have managed to fill even half of their spots. This is partly because Swedes stopped having babies but also partly because of handing out too many licenses to run schools. A school with too few students risks being underfunded relative to its needs of course, and what does that mean for quality?
http://www.dn.se/sthlm/skolinspektio...riskoleskandal
Three highschools run by serious criminals who've served time for sex-crimes against children, pimping and financial crime. Why? Because we weren't particularly careful about watching out for these things.
http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/har...-med-overbetyg
List of the ten most generous private schools in Sweden, assessed by the percentage of students who received a significantly higher final grade than they should have gotten based on their performance on recent (= within a few weeks of receiving final grade) standardised national tests. I like it when schools consider overall performance throughout the year when setting a student's grades but the investigations into these cases suggest that that's not the whole story. This is esp. worrying when a student receives a good grade in a subject a couple of weeks after failing a standardised test on the same subject. The significance of these practices are unclear, but one possible explanation can't be discounted: these schools have strong incentives for inflating students' grades as well as for hiding problems.
http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/fri...r-skarp-kritik
Schools criticised for serious problems.
http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/bri...-nya-friskolor
A quarter of private schools approved between 2008-2009 were subsequently found to not live up to the requirements on which their approval hinged (not to mention the promises they made in their application). Some of these were esp. crappy, leading to further investigations and some revoked licenses. Good thing they were evaluated at all of course!
Just so we're clear, I'm not principally opposed to letting others run schools. I take issue mostly with the naïve and unconsidered approach Sweden has taken to the school reform (actually, all privatization reforms) that has prevented us from evaluating results and addressing problems.
85% of all companies in the school sector only run one school and direct profits in the sector as a whole average around 5%. That's not a lot, but you can hide profits in many ways. Apart from salaries there're the time-honoured practices of buying overpriced services/goods from sister companies and exploiting tax laws to minimise losses incurred by sister companies. These are esp. popular among the three largest managers of private schools in Sweden, all owned by venture capital firms. Venture capitalists are crucial to many businesses but it's an approach that's ill suited to the school sector.
Re. the healthcare sector, esp. the care of the elderly and the disabled... there've been a lot of reports recently--by journalists, whistleblowers, patients and their relatives, by healthcare workers--esp. in the last year or so. To summarise, costs remain high, profits for the owners are high but aren't being reinvested properly (are rather being funneled out to tax havens), and the safety of both carers and patients is being compromised regularly. In several cases the municipalities have been forced to cancel contracts and reacquire extremely mismanaged institutions. Never mind dignity and integrity, I'd almost be happy if half-starved old people didn't get hospitalised due to severe infections just because their carers have been instructed to eg. not change diapers as often as needed.
What's bizarre is that the companies that fuck things up so badly keep getting these contracts. It's esp. frustrating when naïve (or sneaky

) municipal/county politicians repeatedly fail to negotiate properly, leading to huge profits for the private sector and a waste of public funds.