The news from Stockholm is enough to make any City man choke on his morning coffee. A Swedish man has been jailed for coercing his wife into sex with 120 men. The case, which has made its way across the North Sea, has prompted UK police to review consent laws. As if the Crown Prosecution Service needed another reason to keep the chancery clerks busy.
Let us be clear: this is not a story about the depravity of one man. It is a story about the foggy boundaries of consent, and the market forces of moral hazard that operate when legal definitions lack clarity. In Sweden, the conviction rested on the principle that consent given under duress is no consent at all. A simple concept, you might think, but one that has eluded our own legal system for far too long.
The details are, frankly, harrowing. The wife was allegedly coerced over a period of years, with her husband orchestrating encounters and filming them for profit. One hundred and twenty men. That is not a typo. The husband was sentenced to five years in prison, but the damage to the victim is incalculable. And now, UK police are poring over the verdict, wondering if our own consent laws need a sharper edge.
Now, I am not a criminal barrister. I am a financial editor. But I know a thing or two about risk and reward. In the financial markets, if the rules are ambiguous, the sharks will circle. The same applies to the law. If consent can be implied or assumed, the moral hazard is enormous. The Swedish ruling sends a clear signal: duress invalidates consent, regardless of the victim's outward behaviour. That is a bold and necessary step.
But let us consider the implications for the UK. Our consent laws are based on a model of 'freedom to contract', if you will. The Sexual Offences Act 2003 defines consent as agreement by choice, with the freedom and capacity to make that choice. In practice, this has been interpreted narrowly. The Swedish case pushes the envelope. It suggests that even if a victim says 'yes', if that 'yes' is extracted under pressure, it is not valid. This is a higher bar, and one that could send shockwaves through the family courts and beyond.
Critics will argue that this sets a dangerous precedent. That it could criminalise the grey areas of human relationships. That it undermines the presumption of innocence. But let us be honest: the current system has failed. The conviction rate for rape is abysmally low. The market for justice is inefficient. The Swedish ruling acknowledges what any sensible economist knows: when the cost of non-compliance is high, the behaviour changes. In this case, the non-compliance is coercion. The cost is a criminal record and prison time. The expected outcome is a reduction in coercive behaviour.
Of course, the sceptic in me cannot help but note the timing. Just as the economy is struggling under the weight of inflation and gilt yields are rising faster than a City bonus, we are talking about consent laws. Is this a distraction? Possibly. But the two are linked by a common thread: the importance of clear rules. In finance, we need transparent regulations to ensure market efficiency. In society, we need clear laws to ensure justice. The Swedish case is a reminder that ambiguity is costly.
So, what happens next? The UK police are reviewing the laws. Do not hold your breath. Whitehall moves slowly, especially when the Treasury is distracted by a budget deficit that would make a Greek finance minister blush. But the pressure is on. The public mood is shifting. And in a world of high inflation and low trust, the last thing the establishment needs is another scandal.
For now, the message from Sweden is clear: consent is not a transactional commodity. It is a fundamental right. And if our laws do not reflect that, they are not worth the paper they are written on.








