The first link is a news article that has several maps over fees/grants to/from the EU as well as netto and per capita (Choose "Netto (avgift - bidrag) per person" to get net gains per capita). Redder means they pay more, greener means they get more. The three Nordic EU countries are all in the top six, which is made out from, in order from most paying, the Netherlands, Sweden, Belgium, Germany, Denmark, and Finland. In strict numbers Germany, France, and Italy pays the most, but if you look and what people are actually paying per person that isn't true.
The second link is to the Swedish government organ which the newspaper got the numbers from.
Sweet, an insult coupled with links in a language you know I do not speak. Classy.
Don't act all coy and offended. Don't throw shit if you can't handle being told to stick it back up your arse.
Look, if you're going to pull a basic statistics con like calculating one variable per capita and one variable in absolute terms, I'm going to call you out on it.
Then please do. What con?
Fun fact, for anyone else reading this: EU election rules make sure that the votes by people from less populous countries are weighted much more heavily than the votes from more populous ones. For example you need about a million German votes to get a seat in Parliament, but only about eighty thousand Maltese ones - that's less than a tenth.
And remember, the proposal we're discussing would move this ever so slightly in the direction of one man, one vote. That's what scriver calls 'death of democracy'.
The wolves and the sheep, people. One animal, one vote.