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Key Facts: Guinea-Bissau vs Sweden Wages

Guinea-Bissau Minimum Wage
CFA19,030/mo ($34.17 USD)
Sweden Minimum Wage
No statutory minimum wage
Guinea-Bissau Avg. Gross Monthly Salary
CFA95,000 /mo ($170.56 USD)
Sweden Avg. Gross Monthly Salary
kr40,000 /mo ($4,317.74 USD)
Data Sources
ILOSTAT (DF_EAR_INEE_CUR_NB, 2024 reporting); confirmed via Wikipedia master list (citation [95]) (2026-05-04), Medlingsinstitutet (Swedish National Mediation Office) (2026-02-24)

Guinea-Bissau flag Guinea-Bissau Sweden flag Sweden

Updated 2026-05-04

Guinea-Bissau flag Guinea-Bissau

Minimum Wage

CFA19,030 /mo

$34.17 USD

Avg. Gross Salary

CFA95,000 /mo

Sweden flag Sweden

No statutory minimum wage

Avg. Gross Salary

kr40,000 /mo

Avg. salary: -96% Guinea-Bissau vs Sweden

Unlike Sweden, which has no statutory minimum wage, Guinea-Bissau mandates a wage floor of $34/mo. Average gross salaries diverge further: $171/mo in Guinea-Bissau versus $4,318/mo in Sweden, a 25.3:1 ratio. GDP per capita (PPP) in Sweden is 23.0x that of Guinea-Bissau, underscoring the structural economic divide.

Guinea-Bissau has lower GDP per capita ($3,119 vs $71,845). Guinea-Bissau's unemployment rate is 2.7% compared to Sweden's 8.7%.

Detailed Comparison

Detailed wage comparison between Guinea-Bissau and Sweden
Metric Guinea-Bissau Sweden
Minimum wage /day CFA761 $1.37 None
Minimum wage /mo CFA19,030 $34.17 None
Avg. gross salary /mo CFA95,000 /mo $170.56 kr40,000 /mo $4,317.74
Avg. net salary /mo N/A/mo kr30,000 /mo $3,238.31
Median individual income /yr N/A/yr kr367,000 /yr $39,615.29

Percentage differences are based on USD equivalent values. Positive means Guinea-Bissau is higher.

Work Week

Guinea-Bissau

40 hrs/wk standard

Max 48 hrs/wk

Overtime : 1.5x pay

Labour Code sets 40 hours/week as the standard. Overtime provisions apply to formal employment. Portuguese is the official language; labour law reflects Lusophone and OHADA traditions.

Sweden

40 hrs/wk standard

Max 48 hrs/wk

Standard workweek is 40 hours (Working Hours Act / Arbetstidslagen). Maximum overtime is 48 hours over 4 weeks or 200 hours per calendar year. Overtime compensation is determined by collective agreements, not statute. Many agreements provide overtime at 150-200% of normal pay. EU Working Time Directive limits average to 48 hrs/week.

See this comparison from Sweden's perspective: Sweden vs Guinea-Bissau

Compare Guinea-Bissau with...

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the minimum wage higher in Guinea-Bissau or Sweden?

In Guinea-Bissau, the minimum wage is CFA19,030/mo ($34.17 USD). In Sweden, it is no statutory minimum wage.

How much less does the average worker earn in Guinea-Bissau compared to Sweden?

The average gross salary in Guinea-Bissau is CFA95,000/mo ($170.56 USD), compared to kr40,000/mo ($4,317.74 USD) in Sweden. In USD terms, workers in Guinea-Bissau earn approximately 2432% less. Average salaries reflect the full labor market, not just the minimum wage floor. The gap between Guinea-Bissau and Sweden is shaped by differences in industry composition, labor productivity, and the overall cost of living in each country. Workers in Sweden earn more in nominal terms, though how far that income stretches depends on local prices in Guinea-Bissau.

How do work hours compare between Guinea-Bissau and Sweden?

Both Guinea-Bissau and Sweden mandate a similar standard work week of 40 hours. When work hours are equal, the country with the higher minimum wage delivers proportionally higher weekly earnings. Standard work week rules set the baseline; actual hours worked often differ based on industry norms and individual employment contracts.

What is the cost of living difference between Guinea-Bissau and Sweden?

While direct cost of living data varies by source, GDP per capita (PPP) gives a useful proxy for overall economic level. Sweden has the higher GDP per capita at $71,845, which is 23.0x that of Guinea-Bissau at $3,119. From Guinea-Bissau's perspective, this means goods and services are priced at a lower economic level. A higher GDP per capita generally correlates with higher wages, higher consumer prices, and greater availability of goods and services. Workers moving between these two countries should expect significant differences in rent, food, and transportation costs.