Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Europe Reluctantly Deciding It Has Less Time for Time Off
New York Times ^ | 07/07/04 | MARK LANDLER

Posted on 07/06/2004 9:16:48 PM PDT by conservative in nyc

July 7, 2004

Europe Reluctantly Deciding It Has Less Time for Time Off

By MARK LANDLER

FRANKFURT, July 6 — For Michael Stahl, a technician at a cordless telephone factory in the town of Bocholt, summer is usually a carefree season of long evenings in his garden and even longer vacations. His toughest choice is where to take his wife and three children on their annual camping trip: Italy and Croatia are on this year's itinerary.

Two weeks ago, however, Mr. Stahl got a rude jolt, when his union signed a contract with his employer, Siemens, to extend the workweek at the Bocholt plant to 40 hours from 35. Weekly pay remains the same. The new contract also scraps the annual bonuses every employee receives to help pay for vacations and Christmas expenses.

"I'll have to make do with less," Mr. Stahl said with a sigh. "Of course, the family will come off the worst."

After nearly 27 years at Siemens, Mr. Stahl, 42, feels he has no choice but to put in the extra time. Like millions of his fellow citizens, he is struggling to accept the stark new reality of life in a global economy: Germans are having to work longer hours.

And not just Germans. The French, who in 2000 trimmed their workweek to 35 hours in hopes of generating more jobs, are now talking about lengthening it again, worried that the shorter hours are hurting the economy. In Britain, more than a fifth of the labor force, according to a 2002 study, works longer than the European Union's mandated limit of 48 hours a week.

Europe's long siesta, it seems, has finally reached its limit — a victim of chronic economic stagnation, deteriorating public finances and competition from low-wage countries in the enlarged European Union and in Asia. Most important, many Europeans now believe that shorter hours, once seen as a way of spreading work among more people, have done little to ease unemployment.

"We have created a leisure society, while the Americans have created a work society," said Klaus F. Zimmermann, the president of the German Institute for Economic Research in Berlin. "But our model does not work anymore. We are in the process of rethinking it."

From the 1970's until recently, Europe followed a philosophy of less is more when it came to labor, with the result that Europeans work an average of 10 percent fewer hours a year than Americans. Germans, with the lightest schedule, work about 18 percent fewer hours.

The job creation argument went hand in hand with the greater social premium that Europeans place on leisure. In the land of the four o'clock rush hour and the monthlong summer holiday, it does really seem, as the cliché goes, that Europeans work to live, while Americans live to work.

Siemens, however, upset that conventional wisdom by threatening to move production of cordless and cellular phones to Hungary, where salaries are a fraction of those in Germany. That would have cost about 2,000 jobs in a country that, with a jobless rate of 10.3 percent, can ill afford it.

"It's about lowering labor costs," said Peter Gottal, a spokesman for Siemens, which is based in Munich. "Where we are in a global competition, 35 hours are no longer feasible. We just need more hours."

Siemens and its union say that the contract is not a template for the rest of German industry, but it is being viewed that way. The company, one of Germany's largest employers, is negotiating wages at five other factories, and it may demand some of the same concessions, including different work hours, that it received at Bocholt.

A longer workweek also looms for assembly line workers at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Sindelfingen, in Southwestern Germany. There, the company wants to curtail breaks during the workday.

Mercedes has not threatened to abandon Germany. But auto workers shivered recently when Opel, which is owned by General Motors, announced that it would assemble a compact minivan at its plant in Gliwice, Poland, passing over its main factory outside Frankfurt, which had bid for the job.

"The firms are in a good position in these negotiations," said Eugen Spitznagel, a researcher at the Institute of Employment Research in Nuremberg. "The unions recognize that the economic climate is bad."

A small majority of the German public also think that a long workweek may help preserve their jobs, according to a recent survey conducted for the business magazine, WirtschaftsWoche.

Even in Germany's public sector, the work is piling up. The state of Bavaria has extended the workweek to 42 hours from 40. Chancellor Gerhard Schröder wants to extend federal work hours to 40 from 38.5. And Deutsche Bahn, the state railway system, is demanding up to six more hours a week from its engineers and conductors.

Flagging tax receipts and large budget deficits are the main cause of the state's newfound push for hours. In France, however, the government is making a broader case that the 35-hour week, which applies to public- and private-sector jobs, is throttling the country's growth.

"I've never been convinced of the positive effect of a 35-hour week," President Jacques Chirac declared recently. "I feel it's been a brake on economic development and therefore a brake on overall employment."

Mr. Chirac is feeling pressure from his fiery finance minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, who has called for French employees to have the right to work more than 35 hours, if it fattens their paychecks.

Mr. Sarkozy's free-market appeal, though hardly popular with French labor unions, suggests there may be a rebalancing in the basic trade-off Europeans have made between work and leisure.

Since the 1970's, Europeans have been willing to accept somewhat slower growth in wages as a price for fewer work hours and longer vacations. The French have an average of 25 vacation days a year, while the Germans get 30 days. The average in Japan is 18 days and in the United States, 12 days.

For a long time, the price for this was not very high, since Europe had high gains in labor productivity, which contributed to booming exports, briskly growing economies and steady wage growth.

Nearly all of these trends turned negative in the 1990's, as productivity growth rates collapsed, especially in comparison with the United States. For a decade, Europe has been stuck in a period of chronic slow growth.

"We're seeing a change because the trade-off has changed," said Daniel Gros, the director of the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels. "Europeans are seeing that when times are lean, total incomes don't rise at all. So they are saying, `Perhaps we better work longer hours.' "

Mr. Gros disputes the notion that long hours are a panacea for Europe's enervated economies. He says the productivity of workers tends to decline as the number of hours increases. The answer, he says, is for European companies to invest more in workplace training and technology.

To be sure, Europe's dogged pursuit of free time goes on. Sweden is undertaking a two-year study of the social effects of a 30-hour workweek — proving that Thorstein Veblen and his theories about the leisure class still exert a bigger pull on the European imagination than Adam Smith does.

The German government has denied a recent report that it plans to scrap a public holiday on Oct. 3 that celebrates the reunification of East and West Germany. The other 13 paid holidays also seem safe, since most are religious feasts, and the church here retains considerable political power.

Nor have Europe's longer vacations come under the knife yet. The average number of vacation days in western Germany rose to 30 in the mid-1990's from 28 in 1985 and 20 in 1970, and has remained stable since.

The new Siemens contract, however, is pioneering in another way: it replaces the extra payments for vacations and Christmas with a performance bonus, based on the profits of the portable phone division. The payments, once meant to enhance leisure, are now intended to fuel the work.

Mr. Stahl said he would miss the extra money at Christmas, when he would use it to buy gifts and household goods, like a new TV set. The loss of the vacation money next summer will probably keep his family closer to home, perhaps in the nearby Netherlands, rather than in Croatia.

Moreover, Mr. Stahl, who began as a toolmaker's apprentice as a teenager and is now a worker representative in his factory, is skeptical that the performance bonus will ever translate into good money. Siemens, he says, has not done enough to build its brand name overseas as a maker of portable phones, which has limited its profits.

"Shareholders, unfortunately, care only about profits," he said.

Still, Mr. Stahl said he expected that few of his co-workers would walk away from the new contract. Siemens pays well, and jobs like those in the Bocholt plant are difficult to find in today's Germany, he says.

That attitude is even more pronounced in Eastern Germany, where auto workers refused to rally behind the once powerful metalworkers' union, IG Metall, when it called a strike in June 2003 to try to force about a dozen car factories to shorten the workweek to 35 hours from 38 hours, to bring it into line with Western Germany.

IG Metall was forced to abandon the strike, dealing the union and the entire German labor movement a blow from which it has not recovered. The message from the workers was: We will work more, if the alternative is watching our jobs move across the border to Hungary or Poland.

Mr. Stahl reluctantly accepts that view as well, suggesting that the pressure of economic competition is being felt even in Europe's most comfortable quarters.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | Help | Back to Top


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: europe; vacation; workhours
It's about time the Germans and French are learning the follies of their maximum hours socialist ways. Newsflash: limiting hours chases businesses away. Next thing, they'll learn setting a minimum wage too high chases jobs away too... As do unions.

Ironically, it took the former commies in Eastern Germany to stand against their union to get the ball rolling. Socialists may never learn. But commies understand their system failed for a reason.

1 posted on 07/06/2004 9:16:48 PM PDT by conservative in nyc
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
We're seeing a change because the trade-off has changed. Europeans are seeing that when times are lean, total incomes don't rise at all. So they are saying, "Perhaps we better work longer hours." -Daniel Gros, director of the Center for European Policy Studies (Brussels)

Mr. Gros disputes the notion that long hours are a panacea for Europe's enervated economies. He says the productivity of workers tends to decline as the number of hours increases. The answer, he says, is for European companies to invest more in workplace training and technology. -Mark Landler, New York Times

I don't get why the New York Times didn't add even more spin like this to avoid the conclusion that European socialism is stupid. Maybe they were confident their readers would not add it up that way.

2 posted on 07/06/2004 9:26:13 PM PDT by NutCrackerBoy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NutCrackerBoy
Europe Reluctantly Deciding It Has Less Time for Time Off

Whatever happened to "Marshall Plan Socialism"?

3 posted on 07/06/2004 9:33:21 PM PDT by maestro
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
Europe, don't be fooled by this hard work talk. Demand 25 hour work weeks and 20 weeks of vacation a year. It's your right. Do you think they fell for it?

When I had to go to Germany for a couple of weeks of work, I noticed that the Germans were extremely prompt. They were at their computers working right at the start of their shift. But, never ever get between a German and the exit when the shift is over. You will be stomped into the ground by the crowd going over you on the way out.

4 posted on 07/06/2004 9:36:55 PM PDT by KarlInOhio (If life gives you lemons, make lemonade. Warm & sour lemonade because life didn't give ice & sugar.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc

bttt


5 posted on 07/06/2004 9:38:51 PM PDT by Pikamax
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
We can revile and make fun of virtually every single sentence in the article, but here's a good one:

Moreover, Mr. Stahl, who began as a toolmaker's apprentice as a teenager and is now a worker representative in his factory, is skeptical that the performance bonus will ever translate into good money.

So this whiner used to do something at least marginally productive, and is now a union parasite.

QED.

6 posted on 07/06/2004 9:41:18 PM PDT by Hank Rearden (Refuse to let anyone who could only get a government job tell you how to run your life.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
Shareholders, unfortunately, care only about profits," he said.

NO SH*T, FRITZ!

7 posted on 07/06/2004 9:42:22 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (Am Yisrael Chai!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
Five more hours a WEEK? Cry me a FReepin' river.

The loss of the bonuses is more significant, IMHO. But it is on other things such as the yet unaddressed inefficiencies in work distribution that result from decades of overreliance on trade unionism, and the crushing burden of regulation that stifles new, small businesses that the German and French economic engines are faltering. Five more hours a week is pretty cosmetic in comparison.

Here is what I mean: Nicolas Sarkozy...has called for French employees to have the right to work more than 35 hours, if it fattens their paychecks.

The problem isn't the 35 hours, it's that that number was mandatory by government fiat and enforced by its regulatory bureaus. What has to change is not that the European worker be made to work longer, but that he or she be freed to work smarter.

8 posted on 07/06/2004 9:45:24 PM PDT by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: KarlInOhio

The German exit-at-5 thing is absolute. I know of several Americans who have been here in Germany for 20 years and have adapted to the same view. I have seen American managers who became furious at this attitude, especially amongst American workers here. Even in the midst of a contingency period on bases...you'd see these little episodes where people said they were going precisely at 5 and the job needed 30 minutes more of actual work to meet a deadline.


9 posted on 07/06/2004 9:47:10 PM PDT by pepsionice
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc

So now they take two hours for lunch.


10 posted on 07/06/2004 9:48:04 PM PDT by Old Professer (Interests in common are commonly abused.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
Mr. Stahl got a rude jolt, when his union signed a contract with his employer, Siemens, to extend the workweek at the Bocholt plant to 40 hours from 35

Oh, cry me a freaking river. I start one of two jobs in September - I haven't decided which one yet. Either one will be 12 hours a day, 6 days a week.
11 posted on 07/06/2004 9:49:32 PM PDT by July 4th (You need to click "Abstimmen")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pepsionice
The German exit-at-5 thing is absolute.

I'm an hourly worker, but I get to work early, leave late, and take short lunches. No overtime. I like my work and I have no problem putting in at least 45+ hours while getting paid for a 40 hour week. My vacation time is half that of a typical European. The salaried employees where I work put in considerably more than that. It's no wonder we are kicking butt in the productivity arena. I'm also on an upward trajectory. Work is good; I have no use for clockwatchers.

12 posted on 07/06/2004 9:58:37 PM PDT by arm958
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: arm958
You have a good attitude. That will take you far.
13 posted on 07/06/2004 10:10:59 PM PDT by ProudGOP
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc

While I'm sure I'm not the worst case, I'm currently on a 13 day straight, 16+ hour a day binge so any winging by the Germans, French, et al gets a big waaaaaaaahhhh, from me.


14 posted on 07/06/2004 10:19:46 PM PDT by ECM
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: conservative in nyc
"We have created a leisure society, while the Americans have created a work society," said Klaus F. Zimmermann, the president of the German Institute for Economic Research in Berlin. "But our model does not work anymore. We are in the process of rethinking it."

Wow, it took the president of an economic research institute to figure out that a leisure society doesn't work.

For the record, lately I have been working 10 hour days, only to drive home and log back in remotely and keep working. And I am learning a lot, so I don't mind. I wonder if deep down inside me, though, I also like it because this attitude irritates the French.

15 posted on 07/06/2004 10:49:33 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson