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Statistical Yearbook 2014

Statistical Yearbook is a source of useful knowledge about the Danes and the Danish society.

The Statistical Yearbook 2014 contains an almost endless number of figures and presents a detailed insight into the Danish welfare society throughout the recent decades. The book offers various perspectives on the life of the Danes.

Something for every taste
In the Yearbook you can read about both the softer sides of the society such as which movie was the most seen or which name the Danish parents prefer for their children.

You can also find economic statistics such as aggregated business and governmental accounts, GDP, exports and imports etc.

Learn more about Denmark
Included in the Yearbook are links to the the StatBank if you want to examine the figures even closer.

Naturally, the Yearbook also exists in a Danish version.

Also see Denmark in Figures and a portrait of the average Dane.

About Statistical Yearbook

A source of fun and useful knowledge

By examining the Statistical Yearbook you will discover that it is a source of lots of useful and interesting information that only exists as a whole in this book.

You can search for peculiar and funny information like the information in the board game Trivial Pursuit, but you can also find knowledge that describes the serious aspects of the Danish society.

For those with no experience in statistics ...
The Statistical Yearbook contains hundreds of thousands of figures, and because figures themselves does not reveal everything we have written more than 150 pages of text and spiced them with more than 200 graphs. 

... and for the experienced user
The yearbook is the largest collection of statistics that Statistics Denmark publishes in book-form, and there are just about 430 tables in the Statistical Yearbook.

Annually published since 1896

The Statistical Yearbook has been published annually since 1896. Leafing through the yearbook, the reader is introduced to parts of Danish history. From the first volume of the yearbook and onwards, the reader becomes aware of the existence of stories at different levels, each testifying to the great number of changes in Danish society and Danish language.

A story about the developments in society

For each volume of the Statistical Yearbook, statistics on, e.g. population size, geographic distribution and a great number of other statistics are updated. Thereby, the reader is able to keep up with the developments in society year by year, e.g. population pyramids, number of births and deaths, unemployment, public expenditure, etc.

Some tables are gradually omitted, if they are no longer of any importance to society, or because financial resources are not allocated for their upkeep.

Other tables are extended to include more categories or separate tables. Examples are income statistics, where the present yearbooks now include considerably larger and longer tables on income distributed by age, occupation, etc.

Other tables are reduced with regard to their size or number. For example, tables on Danish agriculture take up slowly, but with absolute certainty, less space in the yearbook, while statistics on the tertiary sector (trade and services, ICT, transport, etc.) gradually take up more and more space.

New tendencies are reflected by new tables

New tables are also continuously being introduced as a reaction to the tendencies in society. Year by year, it is only a small number of tables that are introduced, but over a great number of years, they give a clear picture of the developments in society. Below, examples of new tables, which are of historical interest to society, are mentioned:

In the Statistical Yearbook 1909 automobiles are becoming so widespread on the Danish roads, resulting in the construction of a table showing the number of motor vehicles. 

Two decades later (in the Statistical Yearbook 1933) traffic accidents caused by, among others, cars became so widespread that a table showing traffic accidents was constructed and included in the yearbook.

In more recent years, pollution caused by cars has become a subject in the yearbook, which is also true of pollution caused by agriculture, shipping, etc.

At the beginning of the history of the yearbook, the trade union movements are becoming popular, and this is reflected by new tables in the yearbook showing the number of trade union members and work stoppages. Today, data for the tables are still compiled.

Later, this area was supplemented by statistics on industrial injuries, absence due to sickness, atypical working hours, working time accounts, and other statistics relating to working conditions.

During the Second World War, it is of current interest to focus attention on ration cards. A table on this subject is included in the yearbook until 1952. There are also statistics on US Marshall aid until 1954.

It was perhaps due to the occasional shortage of foods that a table showing the average calorie intake of Danes in 1947 was constructed. However, the compilation of data for this table was short-lived.

Statistics on radio and TV gradually appear and are extended, concurrently with the media becoming more widespread. An example of a new statistical area is ICT statistics.

The Statistical Yearbook comprises figures on usage of ICT and the Internet by businesses and citizens. There is also information on families possessing, e.g. DVD recorders and MP3 players, etc.