The US Workweek
Rockie
2,136 Posts
I heard something interesting on the radio on the way in to work this morning. The United States has the longest work week of any developed nation. Most employers in the world work an average of 30-35 hours per week and have an average of 30 days of vacation a year. How can we get this across to US employers? Maybe we would have a happier and less litigious workforce if we came up with a shorter workweek!
By the way, what's the average number of hours you other guys in Human Resources put in in an average week?
By the way, what's the average number of hours you other guys in Human Resources put in in an average week?
Comments
My avg workweek is probably 55 hrs per week.
Do these countries with a shorter work week compensate their employees the same? I would be curious to know what the benefit is of working less. Besides of course... working less x;-)
I wouldn't give up life in these here United States for any amount of work hours!
And also in those other countries , it is not just the workweek- but WHO gets
to work OUTSIDE the home. Lots of people have to stay home and work. I have been there, done that. At least in the United States, never mind the hours 45+ here, I can get outside my home and see people.
Chari
We work a 4 day work week, 10 hours a day. A typical day for me starts at 6:00 am and ends around 5:30 pm with a half hour lunch. So now I log in about 44-45 hours. When we ran 8 hour work day, 3 shifts, Monday through Friday, it was still a 11 hour day but 5 days a week. Although a 35 hour work week would be marvelous, it would still take 44-45 hours to get the work done.
Here is how my 40 hours breaks down:
5 hours - Answering e-mails
2 hours - Playing jokes on co-workers
6 hours - Meetings
5 hours - Checking the weather on the internet
2 hours - calling my wife back
6 hours - thinking of witty comebacks to Don D's posts
1 hour - explaining my internet usage to our network coordinator
3 hours - actual work
3 hours - either drinking coffee or in the restroom
2 hours - preparing my "MASTER LIST"
5 hours - delegating to my assistant
Paul
See, when I started to letting my fingers speak to you guys my plan was a very clear 55 hours and most of it on this forum. I wonder will I loose my exempt status under FLSA because now my 80% of time is typing, looking up stuff in order to prepare a factual posting? A lost soul, Pork
My thoughts precisely!
Thank you!!
I also can usually get faster answers here than almost any other resource.
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." Proverbs 27:17
I currently put in about 42 hours a week as a Generalist in a corporate HR office (1,700 ee's) with an office staff of 7. In my former life as a field HR manager (me and an assistant) for a field office with 300 ee's for a VERY large corp. I put in 60 hours, plus every fourth Saturday.
A lot of European countries are going through some immigration pains now, just like we are. I would bet the unions in Europe are doing their best to keep immigration low to reduce the chances of companies finding cheaper labor.
Terri
I try not to work more than 40 hours a week. However, it took several years of my sacrificing family and friends to get here.
I try for 40, usually put in 45. But like Paul, our business is seasonal. But when all is said and done, and we're sitting in the ol' HR home, who else is going to remember that we put in 50-75 hours?
And who's going to care? Except maybe our families?
I work about 40 hours at work, then another 4 hours to catch up at home on all the HR reading.
I have worked in the USA now for 2.5 years and am still struggling to meet someone who has only two weeks paid leave! Are you including the five days for bereavement, 2 personal days, 2 charity days, public holidays (inc state holidays)etc etc?
Along with the 30% higher wages for the similar European job I don't think US workers have it so bad....
Since a lot of European countries are more socialistic than we are, don't forget the higher tax bill they must pay. That 30% more that they earn doesn't go far when they don't get to spend it.