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    Supervisory Board

    Statistics Denmark is managed by a supervisory board with the Director General in the chair, and it includes seven other members. The supervisory board establishes its own rules of procedure and appoints one of its members as vice-chair. By law, the supervisory board chaired by the Director General is responsible for the following:, The overall strategy and financial management of Statistics Denmark, while the Director General has the sole responsibility for defining the professional criteria for development, collection, compilation and dissemination of Statistics Denmark’s statistical output., The professional independence of the official statistics and of the institution of Statistics Denmark., Consideration and decisions in matters of interest to the strategic management of the institution, including work programme, statistical programme and budget. Decisions as to the extent and ways of collecting data from the business community, including for the purpose of implementing EU and national legislation. In this way, the supervisory board is responsible for the reporting task imposed by Statistics Denmark on the business community., Via the work programme and statistical programme, decisions about the data that public authorities and institutions must submit to Statistics Denmark., Members of the Board, Martin Ulrik Jensen (chair), Director General, David Dreyer Lassen (vice-chair), Professor at the University of Copenhagen, Ida Sofie Jensen, Group Executive Director of the Danish Association of the Pharmaceutical Industry, Mads Bryde Andersen, Professor at the University of Copenhagen, Rikke Hougaard Zeberg, Director General, Agency for Climate Data, Anne Lawaetz Arhnung, Former CEO, Danish Agriculture & Food Council, Lars Andersen, Director of the Economic Council of the Labour Movement, Signe Krogstrup, Member of the Board of Governors, Danmarks Nationalbank

    https://www.dst.dk/en/OmDS/organisation/bestyrelsen

    Strategies

    Statistical programme 2025, The statistical programme provides a short description of the statistics we produce. Each description offers information about the purpose and content of the statistics as well as any development activities in 2025.,  , Strategy 2025, The strategy charts the course for Statistics Denmark’s development towards 2025 and sets the main priorities for our work., Statistics Denmark is the national supplier of independent statistics and data to society. The vision of our activities in the years ahead is to be the preferred source of reliable knowledge on Danish society.,  , Communication strategy 2025, Communication strategy 2025 describes Statistics Denmark’s strategic goals for the development of our external communication towards 2025 and is one of the means to realise , Strategy 2025, ., As a part of Strategy 2025, Statistics Denmark shall be the preferred source of reliable information on society in times where citizens need to navigate through an immense and potentially misleading flow of facts and figures and where it is hard to know for sure whether statistics and analyses are reliable and detached from specific interests., The communication strategy provides an overview of our strategic communication goals and efforts to further develop Statistics Denmark’s external communication, including communication to and with our different target groups. ,  , Statistics are only valuable, when they are trustworthy, comparable internationally, and timely., The faster statistics are made public, the better the knowledge we have of society – a society in constant development. The times need numbers, and numbers must be there on time.

    https://www.dst.dk/en/OmDS/strategi-og-kvalitet/strategi

    Data Fair in Ghana

    Statistics Denmark has participated in the ‘Data Fair’ in Accra, Ghana. Here parliamentarians met with Ghana Statistical Service to discuss the crucial role of data and statistics for decision-making. , 31 May 2021 13:00 ,  , We have been to Ghana - at least on video. The event took place from May 26-28, th, with our engagement as part of the Strategic Sector Cooperation, funded by the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. At the ‘Data Fair’, parliamentarians met with Ghana Statistical Service to discuss the crucial role of data and statistics for decision-making.,  , Director for Social Statistics, Niels Ploug is speaking on line from Copenhagen, Denmark. , Photo: Harrison Ofori,  , As part of the ‘Data Fair’ Director for Social Statistics, , Niels Ploug, , spoke about the relevance of using administrative data for the production of statistics in a video shot at Statistics Denmark. Our colleagues at the Embassy of Denmark, Ghana, were attending the event. , An inventory of administrative data for the production of statistics is based on a digitalisation of administrative procedures. This requires political decisions to modernise the administration of sectors like population registration and give the statistical agency unlimited access to data. And positively, in the key notes of the Ghana Speaker of Parliaments, Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, announced that “if we have data, let us go with data”.  , Denmark has produced population statistics based on administrative data since the 1970’s and therefore our experts at Statistics Denmark are pleased to assist Ghana, through the Strategic Sector Collaboration, in their development of statistics based on administrative data. The process of digitalising the registration of birth and death and establishing the Ghana Card is essential and a good place to start. A bold vision would be for the upcoming 2021 Population and Housing Census to be replaced by administrative data for 2031 Census.,  

    https://www.dst.dk/en/consulting/news-from-international-consulting/2021/28-05-2021-Data-fair-in-Ghana

    MitID Support

    MitID Erhverv and reporting to Statistics Denmark,  (Danish), About MitID Erhverv, By the summer of 2023, all organisations (companies, associations and authorities) that currently use NemID Employee Signature must transition to MitID Erhverv – or re-register., Read more about MitID Erhverv, ., MitID Erhverv and special user privileges, When reporting to a number of specific statistics, you are required to have MitID Erhverv with special privileges for those statistics. This applies, for example, to reporting to Lønstatistikken (Earnings), Fravær (Absence from work) and a number of statistics about social services. You can find instructions for requesting and granting special privileges here:, For MitID rights administrators: , Grant rights (PDF), ., For employees who need special rights: , Request rights (PDF), ., MitID Erhverv for employees located outside of Denmark , It is possible for employees without a CPR number to be created as users in MitID Erhverv: , Follow the instructions from Danish Agency for Digital Government, ., It is also possible to set up MitID Erhverv by using a reporter, who can prepare the connection and ensure documentation of foreign owners without MitID. A reporter could, for instance, be an accountant with a Danish CPR number and MitID or an ordinary employee with a CPR number and MitID., Read more about how to prepare the connection, ., Foreign management representative?, It is not possible for a foreign management representative who does not have a CPR number to use a private MitID without a CPR number to connect an organisation to MitID Erhverv. In these cases, the organisation must be connected by a "reporter" in the organisation who has a CPR number and a MitID., Read more about how to connect your organisation with a management representative without a CPR number and MitID, ., Guidance and support to MitID Erhverv, If you have questions about MitID Erhverv or if you experience errors, you can find instruction at the , Danish Agency for Digital Government,  - or contact MitID Erhverv-support by phone: +45 33 98 00 20., Read more at the Danish Agency for Digital Government, .

    https://www.dst.dk/en/Indberet/vejledning-til-digital-indberetning/mitid

    Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2019

    Name: , VALUTA_ISO_V1_2019 , Description: , ISO 4217, is the International Standard for currency codes. The purpose of ISO 4217 is to define internationally recognised codes of letters and/or numbers that can be used to identify currencies, e.g. for international money transfers or exchange of currencies. This standard was first published in 1978, but many currency codes have been in use before that., The first two letters of a currency code are consistent with country codes that comply with the ISO 3166 standard. The third letter corresponds, where possible, to the initial letter of a country or territory's currency. For example, the currency code for official currency in Denmark is indicated with "DKK", where "DK" is Denmark's country code in ISO 3166 and "K" is the first letter in "Kroner"., Valid from: , January 1, 2019 , Contact: , Rohan James Draper, , rjd@dst.dk, , ph. +45 21 33 89 16 , Codes and categories, Open hierarchy, Download , CSV, DDI, AED: UAE dirham, AFN: Afghan afghani, ALL: Albanian lek, AMD: Armenian Dram, ANG: Netherlands Antillian guilder, AOA: Angolan kwanza, ARS: Argentine peso convertible, AWG: Aruban florin, AUD: Australian Dollar, AZN: Azerbaijani manat, BAM: Bosnia and Herzegovina convertible mark, BBD: Barbados Dollar, BDT: Bangladeshi taka, BGN: Bulgarian lev, BHD: Bahraini dinar, BIF: Burundi franc, BMD: Bermudian dollar, BND: Brunei dollar, BOB: Bolivian boliviano, BRL: Brazilian real, BSD: Bahamian dollar, BTN: Bhutanese ngultrum, BWP: Botswana pula, BYN: Belarussian Ruble, BZD: Belize dollar, CAD: Canadian Dollar, CDF: Congolese franc, CHF: Swiss franc, CLP: Chilean peso, CNY: Chinese yuan renminbi, COP: Colombian peso, CRC: Costa Rican colon, CUC: Cuban convertible peso, CUP: Cuban peso national, CVE: Cape Verde escudo, CZK: Czech koruna, DJF: Djibouti franc, DKK: Danish krone, DOP: Dominican peso, DZD: Algerian dinar, EGP: Egyptian pound, ERN: Eritrean nakfa, ETB: Ethiopian birr, EUR: Euro, FJD: Fiji dollar, FKP: Falkland Islands pound, GBP: Pound sterling, GEL: Georgian lari, GHS: Ghanaian cedi, GIP: Gibraltar pound, GMD: Gambian dalasi, GNF: Guinean franc, GTQ: Guatemalan quetzal, GYD: Guyana dollar, HKD: Hong Kong dollar, HNL: Honduran lempira, HRK: Croatian kuna, HTG: Haitian gourde, HUF: Hungarian forint, IDR: Indonesian rupiah, ILS: Israeli new shekel, INR: Indian rupee, IQD: Iraqi dinar, IRR: Iranian rial, ISK: Iceland krona, JMD: Jamaican dollar, JOD: Jordanian dinar, JPY: Japanese yen, KES: Kenyan shilling, KGS: Kyrgyzstani som, KHR: Cambodian riel, KMF: Comorian franc, KPW: North Korean won, KRW: South Korean won, KWD: Kuwaiti dinar, KYD: Cayman Islands dollar, KZT: Kazakhstani tenge, LAK: Lao kip, LBP: Lebanese pound, LKR: Sri Lankan rupee, LRD: Liberian dollar, LSL: Lesotho loti, LYD: Libyan dinar, MAD: Moroccan dirham, MDL: Moldovan leu, MGA: Malagasy ariary, MKD: Macedonian denar, MMK: Myanmar kyat, MNT: Mongolian tugrik, MOP: Macanese pataca, MRU: Mauritanian ouguiya, MUR: Mauritius rupee, MVR: Maldivian rufiyaa, MWK: Malawian kwacha, MXN: Mexican Peso, MYR: Malaysian ringgit, MZN: Mozambican metical, NAD: Namibian dollar, NGN: Nigerian naira, NIO: Nicaraguan cordoba oro, NOK: Norwegian krone, NPR: Nepalese rupee, NZD: New Zealand dollar, OMR: Omani rial, PAB: Panamanian balboa, PEN: Peruvian nuevo sol, PGK: Papua New Guinean kina, PHP: Philippine peso, PKR: Pakistani rupee, PLN: Polish zloty, PYG: Paraguayan guarani, QAR: Qatari rial, RON: Romanian leu, RSD: Serbian dinar, RUB: Russian ruble, RWF: Rwandan franc, SAR: Saudi riyal, SBD: Solomon Islands dollar, SCR: Seychellois rupee, SDG: Sudanese pound, SEK: Swedish krona, SGD: Singapore dollar, SHP: Saint Helena pound, SLL: Sierra Leonean leone, SOS: Somali shilling, SRD: Surinamese dollar, SSP: South Sudanese pound, STN: Sao Tome and Principe dobra, SVC: Salvadoran colón, SYP: Syrian pound, SZL: Swazi lilangeni, THB: Thai baht, TJS: Tajikistani somoni, TMT: Turkmenistani manat, TND: Tunisian dinar, TOP: Tongan pa'anga, TRY: Turkish lira, TTD: Trinidad and Tobago dollar, TWD: New Taiwan dollar, TZS: Tanzanian shilling, UAH: Ukrainian hryvnia, UGX: Ugandan shilling, USD: United States dollar, UYU: Uruguayan peso, UZS: Uzbekistan Sum, VES: Venezuelan bolivar soberano, VND: Vietnamese dong, VUV: Vanuatu vatu, WST: Samoan tala, XAF: Central African CFA franc BEAC, XAG: Silver, XAU: Gold, XCD: Eastern Caribbean dollar, XOF: West African CFA franc BCEAO, XPD: Palladium, XPF: CFP franc, XPT: Platinum, XTS: Currency code reserved for testing, XXX: No currency, YER: Yemeni rial, ZAR: South African rand, ZMW: Zambian kwacha, ZWL: Zimbabwe dollar, All versions, Name, Valid from, Valid to, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2019, January 1, 2019, Still valid, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2018, January 1, 2018, December 31, 2018, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2017, January 1, 2017, December 31, 2017, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2016, January 1, 2016, December 31, 2016, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2015, January 1, 2015, December 31, 2015, Currency codes (ISO 4217), v1:2014, January 1, 2014, December 31, 2014, Variations, Variation, Historical currency codes, v1:2019, Historical currency codes, v1:2019, Open hierarchy, Download , CSV, DDI, AFA: Afghan afghani, AOK: Angolan kwanza, AON: Angolan novo kwanza, AOR: Angolan kwanza reajustado, ARL: Argentine peso ley, ARP: Argentine peso argentino, ARA: Argentine austral, ATS: Austrian schilling, AZM: Azerbaijani manat, BAD: Bosnia and Herzegovina dinar, BEF: Belgian franc, BGL: Bulgarian lev, BOP: Bolivian peso, BRB: Brazilian cruzeiro, BRC: Brazilian cruzado, BRN: Brazilian cruzado novo, BRE: Brazilian cruzeiro, BRR: Brazilian cruzeiro real, BYB: Belarussian Ruble, BYR: Belarussian Ruble, CSD: Serbian dinar, CSK: Czechoslovak koruna, CYP: Cypriot pound, DDM: East German mark, DEM: German mark, ECS: Ecuadorian sucre, EEK: Estonian kroon, ESP: Spanish peseta, FIM: Finnish markka, FRF: French franc, GEK: Georgian kuponi, GHC: Ghanaian cedi, GNS: Guinean syli, GQE: Equatorial Guinean ekwele, GWP: Guinea-Bissau peso, GRD: Greek drachma, HRD: Croatian dinar, IEP: Irish Pound, ILP: Israeli pounds, ILR: Israeli shekel, ISJ: Iceland kronur, ITL: Italian lira, LTL: Lithuanian litas, LTT: Lithuanian talonas, LUF: Franc luxembourgeois, LVL: Latvian lats, LVR: Latvian rouble, MGF: Malagasy franc, MLF: Malian franc, MRO: Mauritanian ouguiya, MTL: Maltese lira, MXP: Mexican peso, MZM: Mozambican metical, NIC: Nicaraguan cordoba, NLG: Netherlands guilder, PEH: Peruvian sol, PEI: Peruvian inti, PLZ: Polish zloty, PTE: Portuguese escudo, ROL: Romanian leu, RUR: Russian ruble, SDP: Sudanese pound, SDD: Sudanese dinar, SIT: Slovenian tolar, SKK: Slovak koruna, SRG: Surinamese guilder, STD: Sao Tome and Principe dobra, SUR: Soviet ruble, TJR: Tajikistani ruble, TMM: Turkmenistani manat, TRL: Turkish lira, UAK: Ukrainian karbovanets, UGS: Ugandan shilling, YUD: Yugoslav hard dinar, YUN: Yugoslav convertible dinar, YUR: Yugoslav reformed dinar, YUO: Yugoslav dinar, YUG: Yugoslav dinar, YUM: Yugoslav novi dinar, UYN: Uruguayan nuevo peso, VEB: Venezuelan bolivar, VEF: Venezuelan bolivar fuerte, YDD: South Yemeni dinar, ZMK: Zambian kwacha, ZRZ: Zaire, ZRN: Zairean new zaire, ZWC: Rhodesian dollar, ZWD: Zimbabwean dollar, ZWN: Zimbabwean dollar, ZWR: Zimbabwean dollar, « Back to variations list

    https://www.dst.dk/en/Statistik/dokumentation/nomenklaturer/valuta-iso

    Dansk Branchekode 2025 (DB25) V1:2025-

    Name: , DB25_V1_2025 , Description: , Dansk Branchekode 2025 (DB25) is a statistical classification of economic activities, for which the purpose is primarily for statistical use. The introduction, which describes rules and guidelines for classifying activities as well as annexes, has not been finalised, as DST is still awaiting content from the UN/EU., DB25 is a 6-digit Danish subdivision of the EU classification, which is the 4-digit NACE rev. 2.1, which again is a new version of NACE rev. 2 from 2008. NACE rev. 2.1 is the regional version of UN's international classification, ISIC rev. 5, which is a new version of ISIC Rev. 4 from 2008. Initially, DB25 will only be available in Danish. A complete version in English will be available once the Danish version is final in its entirety. Currently, codes and titles are final, but until we get the missing material from UN/EU, the explanatory notes can be subject to updates, if we receive changes from the EU or we find errors., We update the information and files for download on , Statistics Denmark's website , , where you also can read about the update., NACE rev. 2.1 came into force on 1 January 2025 in all EU member states according to Regulation (EU) 2023/137 amending Regulation (EC) No. 1893/2006 on the statistical classification of economic activities. However, the stages of implementation in the administrative registers may vary., NB: It is not possible to produce statistics on the current classification, because data must be collected first. Some statistics are dependent on data from other statistical domains and will have to wait longer. Therefore, statistics will continue to be produced using DB07 for an extended period., Valid from: , January 1, 2025 , Office: , Business Data Collection and Registers , Contact: , Birgit Nielsen, , bgn@dst.dk, , ph. +45 20 51 69 67 , Codes and categories, Codes and categories are only available in Danish , All versions, Name, Valid from, Valid to, Dansk Branchekode 2025 (DB25) V1:2025-, January 1, 2025, Still valid

    https://www.dst.dk/en/Statistik/dokumentation/nomenklaturer/db

    Households with car

    How many cars are there in each household in the different postcodes and parishes?, Here you can get a simple count of how many cars each household has in all postcodes or parishes in Denmark. You can also see how it has evolved over time as the tables contain data for a 10-year period., Contents in the tables, There is 1 table distributed by postcodes and parishes, respectively, ie. 2 tables in total. The tables contain information on:, The number of households in the postcode or parish, How many households have or do not have a car, respectively, Number of cars in each household (1, 2, 3 or more than 3), The total number of cars in the area., Pt. the tables cover the years 2011-2020., Prices, Each table costs , DKK 6.277 incl. VAT,  (DKK 7.846,25 excl. VAT)., You buy access to all data in a table for 12 months, and will be able to extract data for an unlimited number of times during that period. Access also includes new data if the table is updated during the period (if, for example, data is published for a new year)., You can order access to the individual tables by clicking the button below., ONLINE PAYMENT DATA BANK, Please notice that when you order you accept, Statistics Denmark's General Terms and Conditions of Agreements., Contact information, DST Consulting, tel +45 3917 3600, Tailor-made statistics, It is also possible to combine the tables with other variables or have them combined in a different way than in our standard tables. Read more about our , tailor-made statistics,  or send an email to our consultants at , DST Consulting, ., Other relevant products, Key Figures on Postcodes, Key Figures on Parishes

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/produkter/uddannelse-social-og-sundhed/husstande-med-biler