Urob najlepšie investície svojho života
Už od 2 eur sa môžete zabezpečiť Dánsko Mzdové náklady
Cena
Aktuálna hodnota Mzdové náklady v Dánsko je 114,41 bodyky. Mzdové náklady v Dánsko vzrástli na 114,41 bodyky k 1. 3. 2024, po tom čo boli 111,46 bodyky k 1. 12. 2023. Od 1. 3. 1990 do 1. 6. 2024 bola priemerná hodnota HDP v Dánsko 87,47 bodyky. Rekordná hodnota bola dosiahnutá k 1. 6. 2024 s 115,82 bodyky, zatiaľ čo najnižšia hodnota bola zaznamenaná k 1. 6. 1994 s 66,22 bodyky.
Mzdové náklady ·
3 roky
5 rokov
10 rokov
25 rokov
Max
Náklady na prácu | |
---|---|
1. 3. 1990 | 77,68 points |
1. 6. 1990 | 75,83 points |
1. 9. 1990 | 79,71 points |
1. 12. 1990 | 78,78 points |
1. 3. 1991 | 66,50 points |
1. 6. 1991 | 67,05 points |
1. 9. 1991 | 66,92 points |
1. 12. 1991 | 68,76 points |
1. 3. 1992 | 67,51 points |
1. 6. 1992 | 68,82 points |
1. 9. 1992 | 67,57 points |
1. 12. 1992 | 68,15 points |
1. 3. 1993 | 68,19 points |
1. 6. 1993 | 68,50 points |
1. 9. 1993 | 68,18 points |
1. 12. 1993 | 68,78 points |
1. 3. 1994 | 67,01 points |
1. 6. 1994 | 66,22 points |
1. 9. 1994 | 66,79 points |
1. 12. 1994 | 66,68 points |
1. 3. 1995 | 66,58 points |
1. 6. 1995 | 67,44 points |
1. 9. 1995 | 67,61 points |
1. 12. 1995 | 67,89 points |
1. 3. 1996 | 68,66 points |
1. 6. 1996 | 68,36 points |
1. 9. 1996 | 68,75 points |
1. 12. 1996 | 69,48 points |
1. 3. 1997 | 69,11 points |
1. 6. 1997 | 69,20 points |
1. 9. 1997 | 69,84 points |
1. 12. 1997 | 70,76 points |
1. 3. 1998 | 70,47 points |
1. 6. 1998 | 70,91 points |
1. 9. 1998 | 72,61 points |
1. 12. 1998 | 73,44 points |
1. 3. 1999 | 73,34 points |
1. 6. 1999 | 72,66 points |
1. 9. 1999 | 73,94 points |
1. 12. 1999 | 72,86 points |
1. 3. 2000 | 73,28 points |
1. 6. 2000 | 73,13 points |
1. 9. 2000 | 73,63 points |
1. 12. 2000 | 73,25 points |
1. 3. 2001 | 75,87 points |
1. 6. 2001 | 76,25 points |
1. 9. 2001 | 76,35 points |
1. 12. 2001 | 76,66 points |
1. 3. 2002 | 78,60 points |
1. 6. 2002 | 78,98 points |
1. 9. 2002 | 78,82 points |
1. 12. 2002 | 78,96 points |
1. 3. 2003 | 79,81 points |
1. 6. 2003 | 81,21 points |
1. 9. 2003 | 81,22 points |
1. 12. 2003 | 79,90 points |
1. 3. 2004 | 79,99 points |
1. 6. 2004 | 79,43 points |
1. 9. 2004 | 81,45 points |
1. 12. 2004 | 80,72 points |
1. 3. 2005 | 82,27 points |
1. 6. 2005 | 81,17 points |
1. 9. 2005 | 82,44 points |
1. 12. 2005 | 83,08 points |
1. 3. 2006 | 83,39 points |
1. 6. 2006 | 82,65 points |
1. 9. 2006 | 83,37 points |
1. 12. 2006 | 85,91 points |
1. 3. 2007 | 86,55 points |
1. 6. 2007 | 88,87 points |
1. 9. 2007 | 88,30 points |
1. 12. 2007 | 88,90 points |
1. 3. 2008 | 90,32 points |
1. 6. 2008 | 91,97 points |
1. 9. 2008 | 94,01 points |
1. 12. 2008 | 96,43 points |
1. 3. 2009 | 97,84 points |
1. 6. 2009 | 98,51 points |
1. 9. 2009 | 98,42 points |
1. 12. 2009 | 95,67 points |
1. 3. 2010 | 97,48 points |
1. 6. 2010 | 97,08 points |
1. 9. 2010 | 95,99 points |
1. 12. 2010 | 97,05 points |
1. 3. 2011 | 96,72 points |
1. 6. 2011 | 96,15 points |
1. 9. 2011 | 97,57 points |
1. 12. 2011 | 97,26 points |
1. 3. 2012 | 97,77 points |
1. 6. 2012 | 97,32 points |
1. 9. 2012 | 98,01 points |
1. 12. 2012 | 98,77 points |
1. 3. 2013 | 98,18 points |
1. 6. 2013 | 98,27 points |
1. 9. 2013 | 97,91 points |
1. 12. 2013 | 98,47 points |
1. 3. 2014 | 99,16 points |
1. 6. 2014 | 99,32 points |
1. 9. 2014 | 98,26 points |
1. 12. 2014 | 99,25 points |
1. 3. 2015 | 99,48 points |
1. 6. 2015 | 99,66 points |
1. 9. 2015 | 100,37 points |
1. 12. 2015 | 100,49 points |
1. 3. 2016 | 100,33 points |
1. 6. 2016 | 100,16 points |
1. 9. 2016 | 99,65 points |
1. 12. 2016 | 99,73 points |
1. 3. 2017 | 99,61 points |
1. 6. 2017 | 99,31 points |
1. 9. 2017 | 100,34 points |
1. 12. 2017 | 101,06 points |
1. 3. 2018 | 100,57 points |
1. 6. 2018 | 101,70 points |
1. 9. 2018 | 101,68 points |
1. 12. 2018 | 102,25 points |
1. 3. 2019 | 103,00 points |
1. 6. 2019 | 102,55 points |
1. 9. 2019 | 103,09 points |
1. 12. 2019 | 103,69 points |
1. 3. 2020 | 104,61 points |
1. 6. 2020 | 109,39 points |
1. 9. 2020 | 105,34 points |
1. 12. 2020 | 106,47 points |
1. 3. 2021 | 106,28 points |
1. 6. 2021 | 104,29 points |
1. 9. 2021 | 103,64 points |
1. 12. 2021 | 103,79 points |
1. 3. 2022 | 107,55 points |
1. 6. 2022 | 108,89 points |
1. 9. 2022 | 109,42 points |
1. 12. 2022 | 113,09 points |
1. 3. 2023 | 111,22 points |
1. 6. 2023 | 112,62 points |
1. 9. 2023 | 112,18 points |
1. 12. 2023 | 111,46 points |
1. 3. 2024 | 114,41 points |
Mzdové náklady História
Dátum | Hodnota |
---|---|
1. 3. 2024 | 114,41 bodyky |
1. 12. 2023 | 111,46 bodyky |
1. 9. 2023 | 112,18 bodyky |
1. 6. 2023 | 112,62 bodyky |
1. 3. 2023 | 111,22 bodyky |
1. 12. 2022 | 113,09 bodyky |
1. 9. 2022 | 109,42 bodyky |
1. 6. 2022 | 108,89 bodyky |
1. 3. 2022 | 107,55 bodyky |
1. 12. 2021 | 103,79 bodyky |
Podobné makroekonomické ukazovatele pre Mzdové náklady
Meno | Aktuálne | Predchádzajúci | Frekvencia |
---|---|---|---|
🇩🇰 Čiastočný úväzok | 785 600 | 759 500 | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Dôchodkový vek mužov | 67 Years | 67 Years | Ročne |
🇩🇰 Dôchodkový vek žien | 67 Years | 67 Years | Ročne |
🇩🇰 Miera dlhodobej nezamestnanosti | 0,7 % | 0,6 % | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Miera nezamestnanosti | 2,5 % | 2,5 % | Mesačne |
🇩🇰 Miera nezamestnanosti mladých ľudí | 15,3 % | 15,1 % | Mesačne |
🇩🇰 Miera zamestnanosti | 69,6 % | 69,4 % | Mesačne |
🇩🇰 Miera zamestnanosti | 73,8 % | 73,5 % | Mesačne |
🇩🇰 Mzdy | 46 003,13 DKK/Month | 44 545,6 DKK/Month | Ročne |
🇩🇰 Mzdy vo výrobe | 162,7 points | 161,8 points | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Nezamestnané osoby | 76 200 | 75 600 | Mesačne |
🇩🇰 Plný úväzok | 2,15 mil. | 2,154 mil. | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Ponuky práce | 55 678 | 50 610 | kvartál |
🇩🇰 populácia | 5,93 mil. | 5,87 mil. | Ročne |
🇩🇰 Produktivita | 114,084 points | 112,779 points | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Zamestnanci | 3,07 mil. | 3,053 mil. | kvartál |
🇩🇰 Zmena zamestnanosti | 0,1 % | 0,5 % | kvartál |
Makrostránky pre iné krajiny v Európa
- 🇦🇱Albánsko
- 🇦🇹Rakúsko
- 🇧🇾Bielorusko
- 🇧🇪Belgicko
- 🇧🇦Bosna a Hercegovina
- 🇧🇬Bulharsko
- 🇭🇷Chorvátsko
- 🇨🇾Cyprus
- 🇨🇿Česká republika
- 🇪🇪Estónsko
- 🇫🇴Faerské ostrovy
- 🇫🇮Fínsko
- 🇫🇷Francúzsko
- 🇩🇪Nemecko
- 🇬🇷Grécko
- 🇭🇺Maďarsko
- 🇮🇸Island
- 🇮🇪Írsko
- 🇮🇹Taliansko
- 🇽🇰Kosovo
- 🇱🇻Lotyšsko
- 🇱🇮Lichtenštajnsko
- 🇱🇹Litva
- 🇱🇺Luxembursko
- 🇲🇰Severné Macedónsko
- 🇲🇹Malta
- 🇲🇩Moldava
- 🇲🇨Monaco
- 🇲🇪Montenegro
- 🇳🇱Holandsko
- 🇳🇴Nórsko
- 🇵🇱Poľsko
- 🇵🇹Portugalsko
- 🇷🇴Rumunsko
- 🇷🇺Rusko
- 🇷🇸Srbsko
- 🇸🇰Slovensko
- 🇸🇮Slovinsko
- 🇪🇸Španielsko
- 🇸🇪Švédsko
- 🇨🇭Švajčiarsko
- 🇺🇦Ukrajina
- 🇬🇧Spojené kráľovstvo
- 🇦🇩Andorra
Čo je Mzdové náklady
Labour Costs in the context of macroeconomics refer to the overall expenditure borne by employers to compensate their workforce. On our professional platform, Eulerpool, we provide a comprehensive analysis and detailed presentation of labour costs in Slovakia and other countries. Understanding labour costs is crucial for policymakers, businesses, and economic analysts, as it significantly impacts national economic performance, competitiveness, and overall living standards. In Slovakia, the examination of labour costs encompasses several elements, including wages, salaries, social security contributions, pension schemes, and other employee benefits. These components cumulatively reflect the financial burden on employers and can be used to gauge the economic health and labour market dynamics within the country. The dual analysis of gross and net wages forms the cornerstone of understanding labour costs in any economy. Gross wages refer to the total remuneration, including all deductions, before any compulsory contributions or taxes. Net wages represent the disposable income that employees receive after all statutory deductions. The disparity between gross and net wages provides insights into the tax burden and social security obligations that influence the overall cost of labour. One significant factor influencing labour costs in Slovakia is the statutory minimum wage. Established annually by the government, the minimum wage ensures a baseline compensation for all workers, affecting employment levels, business operations, and the overall economy. Changes in the minimum wage can lead to adjustments in wage structures across various sectors, influencing inflation, consumption patterns, and economic growth. Another vital component of labour costs is social security contributions, which include payments toward health insurance, unemployment insurance, and pension funds. In Slovakia, both employers and employees contribute to these funds, impacting the overall cost of labour. Higher social security contributions can increase the financial burden on businesses, potentially affecting their competitiveness and profitability. Employee benefits, such as paid leave, bonuses, and other non-monetary perks, also contribute to labour costs. These benefits, mandated by labor laws or company policies, enhance the overall compensation package but add to the financial obligations of employers. Understanding the scope and scale of these benefits is essential for a comprehensive analysis of labour costs. Labour costs are also influenced by the skill level and productivity of the workforce. Higher productivity can offset higher labour costs, leading to greater profitability and economic growth. In Slovakia, investment in education and training programs is crucial to enhance workforce skills and productivity, thereby optimizing labour costs. Comparative analysis of labour costs across different regions and sectors provides valuable insights into economic disparities and potential areas for policy intervention. In Slovakia, regional differences in labour costs are shaped by various factors, including industrial concentration, urbanization, and availability of resources. Sectoral differences are influenced by the nature of work, capital intensity, and economic value generated. Inflation is another macroeconomic factor that affects labour costs. Rising inflation erodes the purchasing power of wages, necessitating wage adjustments to maintain living standards. In Slovakia, the interplay between inflation and wage growth is monitored closely to ensure economic stability and sustainable growth. Labour costs also have a direct impact on foreign direct investment (FDI). Competitive labour costs can attract multinational companies seeking cost-efficient production bases. However, excessively low labour costs may not guarantee high productivity, leading to a complex balance that policymakers must navigate. In Slovakia, maintaining an attractive balance between labour cost competitiveness and productivity is key to attracting and retaining FDI. The interplay between labour market regulations and labour costs is another crucial aspect. Stringent labour laws can lead to higher labour costs by imposing additional obligations on employers. Conversely, flexible labour market regulations can enhance competitiveness but may affect job security and workers' rights. In Slovakia, labour market reforms aim to balance protecting workers' rights with fostering economic competitiveness. In conclusion, labour costs are a multifaceted component of macroeconomic analysis that significantly influences economic performance and business operations. On our platform Eulerpool, we offer a detailed and professional examination of labour costs in Slovakia, providing essential insights for economic analysts, policymakers, and businesses. By understanding the various factors and dynamics that shape labour costs, stakeholders can make informed decisions to foster sustainable economic growth and competitiveness in Slovakia. Our comprehensive data presentation and analysis serve as a valuable resource for navigating the complex landscape of labour costs in the macroeconomic context.