Denmark
The data in this note reflect different sub-national geographic levels in OECD countries:
Regions are classified on two territorial levels reflecting the administrative organisation of countries: large regions (TL2) and small regions (TL3). Small regions are classified according to their access to metropolitan areas (Fadic et al. 2019).
Functional urban areas consist of cities – defined as densely populated local units with at least 50 000 inhabitants – and adjacent local units connected to the city (commuting zones) in terms of commuting flows (Dijkstra, Poelman, and Veneri 2019). Metropolitan areas refer to functional urban areas above 250 000 inhabitants.
In addition, some indicators use the degree of urbanisation classification (OECD et al. 2021), which defines three types of areas:
- Cities consist of contiguous grid cells that have a density of at least 1 500 inhabitants per km2 or are at least 50% built up, with a population of at least 50 000.
- Towns and semi-dense areas consist of contiguous grid cells with a density of at least 300 inhabitants per km2 and are at least 3% built up, with a total population of at least 5 000.
- Rural areas are cells that do not belong to a city or a town and semi-dense area. Most of these have a density below 300 inhabitants per km2.
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Regional economic trends
Employment and unemployment rates in regions
In Denmark, regional disparities in unemployment rates are moderate compared to other OECD countries. While in Southern Denmark 5.4% of the working force was unemployed in 2022Q2, the share was 3.1% in Zealand.
Meanwhile, the difference in employment rate between the regions with the highest (Copenhagen region) and lowest (Zealand) employment rates reached 9 percentage points in 2022.
Note: Harmonised employment and unemployment rates, aged 15 and over. The OECD median corresponds to the median employment rate in large regions.
Source: OECD (2022), “Short-term regional statistics”, OECD Regional Statistics (database)
The first year of COVID-19 on GDP per capita
The first year of COVID-19 resulted in a decrease in GDP per capita in all Danish regions. Southern Denmark, a region with a GDP per capita -12% below the national average (45 799 vs. 51 760 USD PPP), experienced the largest decrease in GDP among Danish regions, of approximately -3%.
Note: GDP per capita is measured in constant prices and constant PPPs, reference year 2015. Constant prices are calculated using national deflators. The OECD median corresponds to the median decline in GDP per capita observed across OECD large regions over the period.
Source: OECD (2022), “Regional economy”, OECD Regional Statistics (database)
Trends in regional economic disparities in the last decade
Differences between Danish regions in terms of GDP per capita have remained relatively stable over the past nine years, with the richest 20% of regions reporting a GDP per capita 1.7 times higher than the poorest 20% of regions.
Note: The GDP per capita of the top and bottom 20% regions are defined as those with the highest/lowest GDP per capita until the equivalent of 20% of the national population is reached. A ratio of 2 means the richest regions have a GDP per capita twice as large as the poorest regions. The indicator is calculated using large regions, except for Latvia and Estonia, where small regions are used instead. Irish GDP underwent an upwards revision in 2016. Care is advised in its interpretation.
Source: OECD (2022), “Regional economy”, OECD Regional Statistics (database)
Productivity trends in the last decade
Between 2010 and 2019, Zealand and Southern Denmark experienced the highest and lowest productivity growth in Denmark, respectively. Zealand saw a labour productivity increase of 1.6% per year, above the OECD average of 0.9%1. During the same period, Southern Denmark experienced more modest growth in measured labour productivity, averaging 0.9% per year.
All Danish regions experienced a decline in labour productivity between 2019 and 2020. Southern Denmark experienced the largest decline, with a drop of 2.2%
Note: Regional Gross Value Added (GVA) per worker, in USD, constant prices, constant PPP, base year 2015.
Source: OECD (2022), “Regional economy”, OECD Regional Statistics (database)
Well-being, liveability and inclusion in regions
Regional well-being
Compared to other OECD countries, Denmark faces relatively small regional disparities across most well-being dimensions. The starkest disparities across Danish regions are in terms of safety, education and housing.
Note: Regional indices provide a first comparative glance of well-being in OECD regions. The figure shows the relative ranking of the regions with the best and worst outcomes in the eleven well-being dimensions, relative to all OECD regions. The eleven dimensions are ordered by decreasing regional disparities in the country. Each well-being dimension is measured by the indicators in the table below.
Relative to other OECD regions, Denmark performs best in the civic engagement and life satisfaction dimension, with all of Danish regions lying in the top 20% of OECD regions.
The top 20% of Danish regions rank above the OECD median region in all 14 well-being indicators, performing best in terms of voter turnout in the last national election (prior to 2022).
Note: Regional well-being indices are affected by the availability and comparability of regional data across OECD countries. The indicators used to create the indices can therefore vary across OECD publications as new information becomes available. For more visuals, visit https://www.oecdregionalwellbeing.org.
The digital divide
Fixed Internet connections in Danish cities and rural areas deliver speeds significantly faster than the OECD average (53% and 31%, respectively). This gap (22 percentage points) is smaller than in most other OECD countries.
Note: Cities and rural areas are identified according to the degree of urbanisation (OECD et al. 2021). Internet speed measurements are based on speed tests performed by users around the globe via the Ookla Speedtest platform. As such, data may be subject to testing biases (e.g. fast connections being tested more frequently), or to strategic testing by ISPs in specific markets to boost averages. For a more comprehensive picture of Internet quality and connectivity across places, see OECD (2022), “Broadband networks of the future”.
Source: OECD calculations based on Speedtest by Ookla Global Fixed and Mobile Network Performance Maps for 2020Q4.
The average speed of fixed Internet connections is above the OECD average in all Danish regions. Within the country, residents of Copenhagen region, Zealand and Central Jutland experience the fastest connections.
Relative poverty rates
In Denmark, relative poverty rates2 range from 7% to 16% across regions. This 9 percentage point difference is less pronounced than the average difference observed across the 29 OECD countries with available data (16 percentage points), placing Denmark among the five countries with the smallest regional disparities in the OECD.
Note: The OECD median gives the median relative poverty rate observed in a sample made of 326 large regions (from 28 countries), and 28 small regions (from Denmark, Lithuania and the Slovak Republic). Data corresponds to 2020 or the latest available year.
Demographic trends in regions and cities
Population projections by type of regions across OECD countries
Between 2020 and 2040, the population of Denmark is expected to decrease in regions far from a metropolitan area, and to grow in other types of regions. Metropolitan regions are expected to see the greatest change, with their population increasing, on average, by 6 % over the next two decades.
Note: Lines represent the population projection in OECD countries per type of region (Fadic et al. 2019). Denmark is highlighted in blue.
Dependency rate and proportion of the elderly
In the coming two decades, the share of the elderly population in Denmark is expected to increase across all types of regions.
The elderly dependency rate3 in Denmark is also higher than the OECD average (26.8 %) in most regions, ranging from 38% in Zealand to 26.1% in Copenhagen region.
Population in cities
Between 2010 and 2021, all cities in Denmark experienced a rise in population. Population growth ranged from 0.4% per year in Odense to 1.0% per year in Aarhus.
Note: Cities refer to functional urban areas (Dijkstra, Poelman, and Veneri 2019). The boundaries of functional urban areas correspond to the 2020 Urban Audit. Population counts for the functional urban area are aggregated from administrative, municipal-level, data.
Over the past decade, the population has grown the most in Aarhus. Odense has also grown, but to a lesser extent.
Environmental challenges in regions and cities
Greenhouse gas emissions in regions
Since 1990, production-based greenhouse gas emissions have decreased in all Danish regions. Northern Jutland (-7%) and Southern Denmark (-48%) experienced the lowest and largest decline in emissions, respectively.
On average, Danish regions decreased their emissions by 0.76% per year between 1990 and 2018. This is below the 1.93% yearly reduction rate needed to reach the EU target of a 55% reduction in emissions by 2030, with respect to 1990 levels.
Note: Bubbles are proportional to per capita greenhouse gas emissions, not to the overall level of greenhouse gas emissions in the region.
Source: OECD calculations, based on the Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research (European Commission. Joint Research Centre. 2019).
In 2018, greenhouse gas emissions per capita in Denmark were largest in Southern Denmark, Northern Jutland and Zealand.
Note: Regions with low population counts may rank high in greenhouse gas emissions per capita while contributing relatively little to overall emissions in the country.
Urban heat island effect
In Danish cities, the difference in temperature between cities and their surrounding areas (i.e. urban heat island intensity) reaches 3.6 degrees Celsius (°C). The largest effect is observed in Copenhagen and Odense, two cities that are, on average, 4.1°C and 4°C warmer than their surrounding areas, respectively.
Note: The Urban Heat Island Intensity (UHI) index is defined as the difference in land surface temperature between built-up areas and non-built-up areas within functional urban areas. This index can be affected by the type of vegetation and climate in non-built-up areas.
Source: OECD calculations, based on land surface temperature data from NASA’s Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) (Wan, Hook, and Hulley 2021a, 2021b)
References
Source of administrative boundaries: © OECD, © EuroGeographics, National Statistical Offices, © UN-FAO Global Administrative Unit Layers (GAUL)
Footnotes
International comparability in 2019 and 2020 is limited because of methodological differences in the calculation of employment counts during the height of the COVID-19 economic crisis.↩︎
The relative poverty rate gives the share of people – as a % of the regional population – with an income below the relative poverty line (60% of the national median income).↩︎
The elderly dependency rate compares the number of elderly people at an age when they are generally economically inactive (i.e. aged 65 and over), to the number of people of working age (i.e. 15-64 years old).↩︎