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International Internet Magazine. Baltic States news & analytics Thursday, 28.03.2024, 18:13

Differences in working time across Europe

Eugene Eteris, BC, Copenhagen, 26.06.2013.Print version
According to Eurofound’s latest annual working time update, the average collectively agreed weekly working time in the EU was at the level of about 38 hours in 2012, the same as in 2011. The new report reveals working time developments in the EU and Norway in 2012 (as agreed between the social partners by collective agreements). Romania has the longest actual weekly hours –41, 2 hours while employees in Finland worked the shortest hours- 37, 6.

Differences in working time across Europe remain large, concludes the report. The new report reveals an analysis working time developments in the European Union and Norway in 2012 as agreed between the social partners by collective agreements.

 

The working week was on average 30 minutes shorter in the pre-2004 EU15 countries and over 1 hour and 30 minutes longer in the new Member States.


Collective bargaining

Collective bargaining plays an important role in determining the duration of working time in most of the 28 Member States of the European Union, though to a lesser or sometimes negligible extent in some of the Member States that joined the EU since 2004 (so-called NMS-13). This annual report provides a general overview of collectively agreed working time and any major developments taking place in 2012, and it includes data from Croatia, a EU member from 1 July 2013, and Norway. 

 

Belgium, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden and the UK were the only countries registering changes between 2011 and 2012. Slovakia continued in a decreasing trend whereas Spain halted an upward trend: both countries registered a fall of 0.1 hours in collectively agreed weekly hours. Sweden and the UK registered an increase of 0.1 hours per week, while Belgium recorded the highest increase, of 0.2 hours per week.


Average weekly work

The report also looks at the average normal weekly working hours for full-time workers as set by collective bargaining in three sectors representing the manufacturing industry, services and the public sector – metalworking, banking and local government. The banking sector recorded the shortest average agreed normal weekly working hours from the three in the EU, with 37.6 hours, followed by the local government sector, with 37.8 hours, and metalworking, with 37.9 hours.

 

Actual weekly hours worked by full-time employees were longer than the average normal collectively agreed working week in 21 of the 29 countries analysed in the report. In the EU, full-time employees in Romania reported the longest actual weekly hours in their main jobs in 2012 – 41.2 hours, or 0.1 hours less than in 2011. They were followed by employees in Luxembourg (41.1 hours), the UK (40.8 hours), Germany (40.5 hours), Croatia and Cyprus (both 40.3 hours), and Bulgaria (40.2 hours). Employees in Finland worked the shortest hours (37.6). This was 3.6 hours less than their counterparts in Romania, or over 4.5 weeks of work in Romania in a full year. 

 

Across the EU-27, men worked on average 2 hours more than women. In the EU-15, men worked 2.3 hours more per week than women; by contrast, in the NMS-13, men worked around 1 hour and 30 minutes more than women. Again, these averages conceal more stark national situations: men’s actual weekly hours exceeded women’s by 3 hours or more in Ireland, the UK and Italy (3.6, 3.4 and 3 hours, respectively), by less than 1 hour in Croatia, Latvia, Lithuania and Romania, and by less than 20 minutes in Bulgaria.


Annual leave differs significantly

An important factor in the overall length of working time is the paid annual leave to which workers are generally entitled, the report points out. Combined agreed total of annual leave and public holidays in the EU varied from 40 days in Germany to 28 days in Estonia – a difference of over 2 working weeks. 

 

All 28 countries studied have a statutory minimum period of paid annual leave, and the average figure for the EU-28, including paid leave and public holidays, stood at 35.1 days – 36.6 days in the EU-15 and 30.3 days in the NMS-13. The report reveals big differences between countries, with employees in Germany enjoying up to 40 days of leave in total in 2012, followed by employees in France and Italy (39 days), while other notably low-leave countries included Hungary, Lithuania, Poland and Romania, with 29 days, and Estonia with 28 days. 

 

Taking into account the agreed weekly hours, the days of leave and the public holidays, in 2012, the average collectively agreed annual normal working time was approximately 1,712 hours in the EU-28, 1,678 hours in the EU-15, and 1,824 hours in the NMS-13.

 

Source: Press release at www.eurofound.europa.eu, 26 June 2013.    







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