GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
S

Aktiebolaget SKF

Bearing and industrial technology manufacturer

SwedenIndustrial Technology
56
MIXED

of 100 · improving trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

56/100

Raw Score

45/85

Confidence

60%

Evidence

Broad

About

SKF is a globally important Swedish industrial company whose strongest public case rests on long-horizon engineering usefulness, serious current decarbonization work, and disciplined governance architecture, but whose integrity record is meaningfully stained by the 2014 automotive-bearings cartel case and by continuing human-rights and supply-chain risk exposure.

The current record is mixed-positive. SKF looks more morally serious than many industrial peers because it publicly ties strategy to climate reduction, safety, due diligence, and responsible-business standards, and it made a comparatively orderly exit from Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. But that case is weakened by a major historical antitrust breach and by the company's own acknowledgment that workers in its value chain remain exposed to unsafe conditions and human-rights risks.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview44%(11/25)
Contribution to Others43%(13/30)
Personal Discipline60%(6/10)
Reliability60%(3/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

SKF looks morally more serious than a purely extractive industrial firm, but it remains easier to respect than to idealize.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god0/5
Belief in unseen order4/5
Belief in revealed guidance2/5
Belief in prophets as examples1/5
Belief in accountability last day4/5

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives2/5
Helps the poor or stuck1/5
Helps people who ask directly3/5
Helps free people from constraint4/5
Helps orphans or unsupported young people1/5
Helps travelers strangers or cut off people2/5

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently4/5
Gives obligatory charity2/5

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication3/5

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during personal hardship4/5
Patient during financial difficulty4/5
Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1907

SKF is founded around Sven Wingquist's self-aligning ball bearing invention

SKF traces its institutional origin to 1907, when Sven Wingquist's self-aligning ball bearing invention became the base for a new Swedish bearing company built around engineering reliability and reduced friction.

Created a long-lived industrial institution whose public usefulness rests on solving friction, reliability, and machinery-performance problems at scale.

high
1919

SKF launches spherical roller bearings that broaden its industrial usefulness

SKF launched a bearing design in 1919 that materially expanded how its technology could be used across industries and helped cement its identity as a long-horizon engineering innovator rather than a single-product manufacturer.

Strengthened SKF's public value as an enabling industrial platform rather than a narrow specialty company.

high
2014

European Commission fines SKF in the automotive bearings cartel settlement

The European Commission said SKF and other bearing manufacturers had colluded on pricing strategy for automotive bearings for more than seven years in the EEA, producing one of the most serious integrity failures in SKF's modern public record.

Severely weakened SKF's integrity standing even though the company cooperated in the investigation and received a leniency reduction.

high
2022

SKF decides to exit Russia after the invasion of Ukraine

SKF announced it would cease business and operations in Russia, pursue a controlled divestment, and try to secure a future for employees there, while stating that sanctions and export controls had been respected.

This was a comparatively principled pressure response that accepted commercial cost while still trying to reduce employee harm.

high
2024

SKF's annual reporting explicitly identifies supply-chain working-condition and human-rights risks

SKF's 2024 reporting described negative upstream impacts including unsafe working conditions, harassment, discrimination, and human-rights violations in the value chain, showing a more explicit due-diligence posture than many peers.

Counts as a governance-strengthening step, but it also confirms that the company still faces meaningful unresolved social-risk exposure beyond its direct workforce.

medium
2025

SKF reports major decarbonization progress and additional decarbonized factories

SKF said it had reached a 79% reduction in scope 1 and 2 emissions from a 2019 baseline in 2025, while additional factories achieved decarbonized status under its 2030 operations target.

Provides real delivery evidence that SKF's climate commitments are not merely symbolic.

high
2025

SKF commits to a costly Automotive separation and footprint optimization

At its 2025 Capital Markets Day, SKF said it was moving ahead with the Automotive separation, accepting large restructuring and separation charges to create two more focused businesses.

Shows strategic adaptability and resilience, but also signals disruption risk and the moral test of how restructuring costs are distributed.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

European Commission cartel case

2014

EU competition authorities concluded that SKF participated in a cartel involving automotive bearings across the EEA for more than seven years.

Response: SKF cooperated in the investigation and accepted settlement, but the case still marks a serious governance and integrity failure.

negative_integrity_under_pressure

Russia exit after invasion of Ukraine

2022

SKF faced sanctions, export-control, employee, and business-continuity pressure after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Response: The company first halted exports, then chose a full operational exit and controlled divestment while saying it aimed to secure a future for employees in Russia.

mixed_but_principled_resilience

Automotive separation and footprint optimization

2025

SKF chose a disruptive restructuring path with large charges in order to split off Automotive and sharpen both businesses.

Response: Management framed the move as long-term value creation and continued to pair it with sustainability targets, but the social effects depend on implementation.

positive_resilience_with_social_risk

Progression

crisis years

The record shows that scale and professionalism did not prevent major integrity failure and difficult geopolitical exposure.

mixed

current stage

SKF now looks like a disciplined but morally mixed industrial incumbent: stronger on climate delivery and governance visibility than on proving clean integrity and full supply-chain justice.

up

early years

SKF began as an invention-led company built around a concrete industrial problem and quickly became a Swedish export institution.

up

growth years

The company matured into a globally important industrial-technology platform with strong product depth and wide geographic reach.

up

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Repeated pattern of turning engineering innovation into long-duration public usefulness rather than one-off product wins.
  • Visible institutional habit of formal governance, codes, and structured sustainability integration.
  • Recent pattern of treating decarbonization as an operational program with measurable milestones rather than only a communications theme.

Concerns

  • Integrity systems have not always prevented major market-conduct failure, most notably the automotive-bearings cartel case.
  • SKF's social-care story is strongest for direct operations and weakest where supplier and upstream-worker conditions are harder to observe and control.
  • Strategic transformations are handled with discipline, but they can still shift stress onto employees and local industrial communities.

Evidence Quality

7

Strong

2

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad