Northern European countries, where Perbost said part-time jobs are much more common, have the lowest hours per week worked, for all workers, both full-time and part-time: the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, the UK and Germany all average around 35 hours per week, according to Eurostat’s 2017 figures. Meanwhile, Greece’s workers logged an average of 38 hours, followed closely by Spain, Portugal and Italy. French workers, collectively, clocked in at about 35 hours on average.
Take a close look at part-time working hours across Europe and a startling trend emerges. The French even work longer part-time hours than their peers.
The part-time workweek in France averages 23.3 hours, compared with 20.1 for most of the other European Union countries, according to a 2013 survey by the French employment ministry’s research group Dares.
That might help explain a few things to engineering manager Martinez. “When I call Germany after around 16:30 I’m always surprised at how few people are in the office,” said Martinez. “Maybe it’s us in Spain who’ve got it backwards.”
在公众的印象里,有两个欧洲:勤劳的北部,拥有低失业率和生机勃勃的经济;还有一个是萧条的南部,人们宁愿悠闲地喝着浓咖啡,看着匆忙的世界。
很多人误解法国像南部一样,一周工作35小时,午餐时间长,甚至更长的假期。但是,任何一个在这个国家工作的专业人士所了解的则是另外一种情景。
【打破法国人每周工作35小时的神话】相关文章:
最新
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15