dc.description.abstract | In Denmark, the Commission on Administrative Structure started off a new local government
reform in October 2002. This reform contained three main goals: new municipalities, new
distribution of tasks, and a new financing system. Besides, the new Local Government Act
included: abolishing the county councils and the Greater Copenhagen Authority, creating five
administrative regions to take responsibility for hospitals, creating larger municipalities with
more than 30 000 inhabitants (finally 98 communes), and delegating to the municipalities
the overall responsibility for local business development in collaboration with the business.
The local government reform created a new structure of the public sector where the state lay
down the general framework. 98 municipalities replaced the previous 271. The municipalities
undertook most of the citizen-related tasks. This reform have had an impact on local
democracy in Denmark because of the newly established democratic departments (regional
councils) and more political decisions being made on the local level. Since 2007, the new
responsibilities of the regions have been: hospital service, regional development, environment,
business, tourism, employment, education and culture, raw material mapping and planning,
and establishment of transport companies throughout Denmark. Responsibilities of the
municipalities since 2007 have been, among other: social services, primary schools, care for
the elderly, health care, activation and employment projects for the unemployed, supplies
and emergency preparedness, local business service and promotion of tourism, participation
in regional transport companies, and local road networks. | en_EN |