By Juhana Rossi 

HELSINKI--Finnish voters looks likely to oust their center-right Prime Minister Alexander Stubb at elections on Sunday and back his centrist rival Juha Sipila to reverse a deep economic slump which has drained public finances and sent unemployment higher.

An opinion poll by public broadcaster Yle showed 24% support for front-runner Mr. Sipila's Centre Party giving it a comfortable seven percentage point lead over Mr. Stubb's National Coalition Party.

The nationalist Finns Party and left-leaning Social Democrats could also take second place, according to the poll.

"We need change. Something has to be done about the economy," said Maija-Liisa Vuento-Lammi, a business manager, in a Helsinki square where party activists were canvassing busily on Friday afternoon.

Finland is trying to recover from a three-year-long recession. The Nordic country's jobless rate has risen to 13.4%, according to a broad measure of unemployment used by the government, as mainstay industries such as handset making and paper have declined sharply. The outcome of the election will go some way toward deciding how the country will go about fixing that.

The National Coalition Party has signaled the most willingness to push through spending cuts to mend Finland's economy while the other three major parties have been more cautious about advocating austerity judging that their voter base would suffer more from cutbacks in government spending.

The Centre Party is committed to curb the public deficit but more slowly than in the four years suggested by experts at the Ministry of Finance.

"Living with borrowed money needs to be stopped in six years," Mr. Sipila told The Wall Street Journal.

The issue of relations with neighboring Russia has figured in the background to the election debate without becoming a decisive issue. Finland has extensive trade links with Russia and has sought to preserve them while signing off on European Union sanctions against Moscow.

Finland isn't a NATO member and none of the parties competing for power have made changing that an election issue.

Mr. Stubb has struggled for traction since taking over as leader last year from Jyrki Katainen who left to join the European Commission.

Last fall Mr. Stubb survived a no-confidence vote after the Finns Party challenged him over his running of the economy in the wake of a credit rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's.

Meanwhile Mr. Sipila has been gaining ground and his party has led opinion polls for six months.

Before entering politics, Mr. Sipila was an entrepreneur who became a millionaire after he sold his network technology company in 1996.

Mr. Sipila was first elected to parliament in 2011 at the same time as his party suffered a defeat which pushed it into opposition. He became the party leader in 2012.

Before the financial crisis hit in 2009, Finland's combination of steady economic growth and a comprehensive welfare system was widely admired with national champions Nokia adding a burnish to the country's reputation. That has now faded.

"The Nokia-driven mobile phone making has collapsed, graphic paper production is withering away, and exports to Russia have dropped due to the Ukraine crisis," said Sixten Korkman, a professor of economics at the Aalto University.

Recurring budget deficits have pushed Finland's ratio of public debt to economic output from 32.7% in 2008 to 59.3% in 2014.

All parties broadly agree about the gravity of Finland's problems, but they have been rather vague in outlining their plans on how they should be remedied, the academic Mr. Korkman said.

Focus will be on whether the Finns Party, which is critical of the European Union in its current form, will be included in government this time.

They were excluded after the last election despite a strong result after refusing to compromise on its refusal to accept a second loan program for Greece.

If the Finns finish second, the most probable combination for a coalition government could be the Center Party, the Finns, and the Social Democrats, said Erkka Railo, a political scientist at the University of Turku.

Finns leader since 1997, 52-year-old Timo Soini, is now eager to find a way to take his party into government, he said.

"I think he is willing to make concessions to do so," Mr. Railo added.

Write to Juhana Rossi at juhana.rossi@wsj.com

Access Investor Kit for Nokia Oyj

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=FI0009000681

Access Investor Kit for Nokia Oyj

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US6549022043

Nokia (NYSE:NOK)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Nokia Charts.
Nokia (NYSE:NOK)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Nokia Charts.