Denmark's Flexjob System: Europe's Most Ambitious Disability Employment Scheme — and Its Limits
A System Built on Inclusion
Denmark built its disability employment architecture on a foundational commitment: that every person with reduced work capacity who wants to work should be able to do so, with public subsidy bridging the gap between their productivity and the market wage.
The flagship expression of this commitment is the flexjob — a permanent, open-ended position in which the employer pays only for the worker's actual productivity, while the municipality tops up the remainder to a living wage. As of 2024, approximately 77,000 people are employed in flexjobs (AMS, 2024), making it one of the largest disability employment schemes in Europe relative to population size.
The annual public cost is estimated at DKK 18–20 billion (€2.4–2.7 billion), or roughly 0.7% of GDP — among the highest disability employment expenditures per capita in the world.
How Flexjobs Work
A flexjob is awarded by the municipality following an assessment of reduced work capacity. Key features: