
Key points in the new government's program:
- Higher salaries for public sector employees. The funds should be found by cutting bureaucracy in municipalities and regional administrations, and in return, employees should have fewer opportunities to work part-time.
- Increased employment: The government will make decisions that will increase employment by 45,000 full-time employees by 2030. According to the new government, this will increase GDP by 1%, equivalent to 26 billion Danish kroner in 2030.
- This will be implemented through the following:
- More will have the opportunity to move from part-time to full-time
- More non-Western immigrants are being employed by requiring people in the cash assistance system to go to work, and to achieve integration goals as well.
- A plan to establish a family relocation center and provide financial support to the surrounding areas.
- Reducing the number of women at the Kærshovedgård deportation center by distributing them to deportation centers in other areas.
- Evaluating the files of young Syrian women for residence permits for those studying in fields experiencing employment shortages in Denmark
- Tightening laws for those convicted of terrorism in general and deporting those convicted of it
- -Reassessing the Danish language proficiency requirement for family reunification applications and reducing the required guarantor fees by half
- To move forward with the establishment of an asylum center outside the borders of the European Union through cooperation with international institutions and countries both within and outside the European Union.
- A plan was developed to reduce parallel societies in 2023.
- Consider private schools that have an imbalanced number of students due to students of non-Western origins.
- A plan to reduce violence against women of foreign origin
- Providing more skilled workers by promoting vocational training.
- Improving the skills of unskilled adults.
- Giving more older people the desire to stay longer in the labor market
- The emergency plan should stabilize and strengthen hospitals in the short term, including bolstering emergency departments and eliminating waiting lists. The priority is 0.2 billion Danish kroner in 2022, 0.8 billion in 2023, and 1 billion in 2024.
- Master's programs are being shortened as the government will convert up to half of the master's programs into one-year master's programs. With the reorganization, the quality of teaching must also be raised through more teaching, smaller classes and better guidance.
- The government will propose that in higher education in the future it will only be possible to obtain an SU for a specific period only and there should be a maximum limit for the SU klip, which is 58 instead of the current 70.
- Jobcenter is closing:
The government will rethink and reform employment efforts so that costs are reduced by three billion kroner in 2030. This must be done by closing Jobcenters and freeing municipalities from the requirements of state procedures so that they have greater freedom in organizing employment efforts. - Social security funds and private actors should play a greater role in efforts to support those who are only short-term unemployed. Other employment efforts should prioritize citizens who face greater challenges in finding work.
- Restructuring the healthcare system: The government will form a structural committee to consider the future organization of the healthcare system to reduce geographical, social, and professional inequalities. Additionally, it must ensure a better division of labor between hospitals and the local healthcare system.
- The maximum tax rate was reduced with the new reform:
The government will increase the amount available to salaried employees through a tax reform, allocating five billion kronor to it. - The top tax rate was reduced by 7.5 percentage points for income up to 750,000 Danish kroner before labor market contributions. The top tax rate was increased by 5 percentage points for income exceeding 2.5 million Danish kroner before labor market contributions. This reduces top tax revenue by 0.7 billion Danish kroner.
- Defense spending is increasing more rapidly: the government will boost investments in the armed forces so that Denmark can more quickly meet NATO requirements. In the National Compromise, it was agreed to increase defense spending to 21 TP3T of GDP by the end of 2033. The government will push for this to be achieved by 2030.
- Investigating the Danish intelligence case:
The government will form a commission of inquiry to investigate the decision to dismiss senior officials in the Defense Intelligence Service from their positions, and the commission will investigate whether unfair considerations were taken into account in the dismissal processes. - Climate tax on agriculture
Agriculture and food production should be subject to a climate tax, though the extent to which a climate tax should be levied on agriculture is unclear. The government will only submit a proposal once the Green Tax Reform Group of Experts presents its conclusions. Requirements include ensuring that a carbon tax does not weaken the competitiveness of the industry and that jobs are not relocated abroad. The tax revenue should be reinvested directly in agriculture and used to support the green transformation of the industry. - The climate tax will contribute to reducing emissions in the agriculture and forestry sector by 55-65% in 2030 compared to 1990.
- دراسة استياء الأطفال والشباب: ستشكل الحكومة “لجنة من أجل حياة كريمة للأطفال والشباب” ، كما جاء في المؤسسة الحكومية حيث يجب أن نأتي بتوصيات حول كيفية منع عدم الرضا بين الأطفال والشباب.
- Danes must do without gas-powered heating and water heating appliances: The government wants to steer more Danes away from gas-powered heating and water heating appliances in order to reduce Danes' energy spending next winter, so a new national energy crisis task force has been created.
- The energy crisis task force must ensure national coordination for the implementation of district heating systems and guarantee measures that can accelerate the expansion of solar and wind power. Additionally, the electricity grid must be expanded in areas currently facing capacity challenges.
- The railway line across the Vejle Fjord was cut because there was no longer a majority in favor of the settlement in Togfunden. The government decided that the railway line over the Vejle Fjord should be cancelled, and this would save nearly six billion kroner, which had been earmarked for a funding fund that could, for example, be used to support the children’s sector or the climate.