But Denmark keeps the krone pegged to the euro, and so when the krone rises in value, “the central bank has to respond,” he added.
The central bank has been spending kroner to purchase foreign exchange and building up reserves.
Because of these purchases, the central bank has also increased the gap between Denmark’s interest rates and the ones set by the European Central Bank.
The central bank declined to comment for this article.
It caused the country’s currency to soar, in the process making other exports expensive and uncompetitive and hampering the overall Dutch economy.
Persons:
Mr, Pedersen, Helge J
Organizations:
Novo Nordisk, krone, Danske Bank, European Central Bank, —, Nokia
Locations:
United States, Denmark