Cultura de trabalho e ritmo semanal em Denmark
Denmark operates a thirty-seven-hour standard workweek under most collective agreements, with statutory minimums set lower but routinely exceeded by sector practice. The Danish labour market is famously flexible: there is no statutory minimum wage, no mandatory employment contract template and relatively short notice periods, all balanced by generous unemployment benefits and active retraining policies in what is internationally known as the Danish flexicurity model.
Statutory paid leave is twenty-five working days per year under the Holiday Act. The system was overhauled in 2020 to a concurrent accrual model where leave is earned and used in the same twelve-month period, replacing the previous staggered system. Many collective agreements add extra contractual leave (feriefridage), bringing total leave for office workers to twenty-eight or thirty days.
Hierarchy in Danish workplaces is notably flat. First-name terms are universal, decision-making typically involves all team members, and the cultural value of janteloven (the principle that one should not consider oneself better than others) makes overt self-promotion uncommon. Business meetings are usually short and decision-focused, and small talk is appreciated but not extensive.