Recent high property valuations have inspired a hasty nationwide sell-off. Plus, Gen Z employees are more likely to quit their jobs, and if you live next to a wind or solar plant, you could be in line for a payout.
Recent high property valuations have inspired a hasty nationwide sell-off. Plus, Gen Z employees are more likely to quit their jobs, and if you live next to a wind or solar plant, you could be in line for a payout.
Banks’ interest rates have spiked, but financially-stable customers aren’t folding. Plus, Fisketorvet mall presents schmick new roof-terrace plans, FCK prepares to face Bayern tonight, and new figures find porpoises fleeing oxygen-depleted Danish waters.
It’s the first time that all 27 member states have met outside the EU. Plus, the ban on outdoor dining after 22:00 loses support, and Greenlandic women sue the Danish state in forced-birth-control scandal.
Plus, NATO inaugurates its quantum technology centre in Copenhagen – a “crucial step” in the advanced global weapons race, and the Koran-law faces more criticism.
In today’s news round up:
Yesterday, The Copenhagen Post reported that hotels and accommodations have been missing payment from the portal Booking.com for several months. Now, DR reports that it is not only Danish hosts who are having payment issues with Booking.com.
The BBC has spoken to several hosts in Scotland and England who are still out of pocket. One of them is Emma Audain, who rents out her flat in Glasgow and says she is owed some GBP 3,000 (about DKK 25,000) and has not been paid since June.
On Wednesday, the industry association Horesta announced that Booking.com will pay out the money owed to several Danish hotels and accommodations.
But that message doesn’t mean much to the affected owners of hotels and accommodation.
“We have heard the same song that things will be resolved for the last 14 days, and nothing has happened,” says chairman at Danske Hoteller, Erik Sophus Falck, to DR.
Danske Hoteller is a chain of 25 hotels spread across the country. Booking.com owes the company DKK 5,120,000.
According to Danske Bank’s latest ‘spending monitor’, which follows the private consumption of one million Danes, it appears that the Danes in the first two weeks of September have kept their purse strings tight, writes BT.
Consumption in general was weak, and sales in stores were 1.1 percent less than the same period last year – adjusted for inflation.
“We must state that consumers are holding on to their money and that we are experiencing a clear slowdown in consumption. The Danes actually have the money to have a higher consumption, but they choose not to. Although wages are rising and inflation has come down, people are simply worried. Therefore, they spend less money,” says Las Olsen, chief economist at Danske Bank
In the last two months, there has been a negative development in consumer confidence – the Danes’ view of the economy
While the Capital Region has just adopted its budget for 2024 without major savings, it looks worse in the Central Jutland Region.
New figures show that the hospitals’ treatment capacity and financial situation are facing steep challenges. The region must now examine the possibilities of a hiring freeze, a freeze on the use of temporary workers and a freeze on agreements on voluntary extra work.
The hospitals in the Central Jutland region have serious capacity challenges in almost all treatment areas. The reports expose several areas where the hospitals are unsure whether they will be able to meet the guaranteed waiting times in the future.
The alarm was sounded shortly after the regions adopted their new budgets. Several local politicians have expressed frustration that savings must be made in municipalities and regions that run the healthcare system in Denmark.
The more we engage in structured exercise training, the more we tend to cut back on daily non-exercise physical activities like riding a bike to work instead of driving, or taking the stairs instead of hopping on an elevator.
This is the conclusion reached from a meta-study from the University of Copenhagen. According to the study’s authors, this is an important consideration for anyone seeking to lose weight.
“In 67 percent of the studies, we can see that people cut back on physical activities in their daily lives as compensation for more training. This includes walking less, cycling less and taking an elevator instead of the stairs,” says Julie Marvel Mansfeldt, a graduate student at the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports (NEXS).
According to Mansfeldt, our tendency to be less physically active outside of exercise time is probably a mixture of physiological and psychological mechanisms within us.
“The compensation can come from simply feeling more tired after a training session at the gym. But there is probably a psychological factor, which is a kind of reward system that kicks in and makes us think we deserve to lie on the couch and skip the long walk with the dog, or take the car to the supermarket instead of cycling,” Mansfeldt explains.
Apple CEO Tim Cook is in Copenhagen. Cook is currently traveling around Europe and has been to Spain and Belgium, among other places.
According to a new study families with children leave the capital. Read also: Norwegian hotel billionaire to expand, September about to set new record and other news.
Welcome to a new week, which as the previous one looks sunny and mild.
The Minister for Immigration and Integration says that the scheme has turned out to be a good entry to the Danish labour market. Other news on the Copenhagen housing market, Quran burnings and shopping streets in trouble.
According to Politiken au pairs say that the host families didn’t want them to participate in the Danish courses. In todays round up you’ll also find stories on tax cuts vs welfare and new guidelines for smartphones and tablets…
After a silent start to his new job, the chairman of FH, Morten Skov Christiansen, enters the debate and says no to more internationals and tax cuts. Fewer kids grow up at the countryside and entrepreneurs abandon Denmark
Tuesday’s news is about trouble with interpreter fees, the Danish model and citizens forced into a battle with the tax authorities