German working hours
increase June 29, 2004
Experts: Longer Work Week Already
Reality.
While Germans are debating whether to extend the work
week to help the country's ailing economy, some experts say many employees
already spend almost 40 hours on the job each week.
When
electronics giant Siemens and trade union representatives recently agreed
to re-introduce the 40-hour work week at two German plants in return for a
two-year job guarantee, some employers and conservative politicians hailed
the deal as a way to secure jobs.
Union leaders meanwhile
vehemently opposed the idea, saying that they had only agreed to the
Siemens deal because the company, which had threatened to move 2,000 jobs
to Hungary, agreed to invest in German factories.
Jürgen Peters,
the head of Germany's metal workers' union, IG Metall, said that a
universal 40-hour work week would serve as the country's "biggest job
destruction program since World War II" and denied reports that hundreds
of German companies were trying to follow Siemens' lead.
But longer
work weeks have been a topic during the current contract negotiations for
800,000 employees in the construction industry as well as 150,000 people
employed by Germany's railway company, Deutsche Bahn.
Six
million unemployed?
Peters added that unemployment figures
would quickly rise should the work week be extended, leaving a total of
six million Germans without jobs. Currently, about 4.3 million people are
unemployed.
But experts from the federal agency that handles
unemployment said the debate about an extended work week was futile as
most Germans de facto work 40 hours. "We're not that bad," Eugen
Spitznagel from the Federal Labor Agency's economic research institute,
IAB, told Berliner Zeitung.
While Germany's average work week with
37.7 hours ranked among the shorter ones when compared to other EU
countries, most people actually ended up working longer than contractually
required, bumping the actual work week to 39.9 hours, Spitznagel said.
That puts the country just below the average work week of the 15 old EU
countries, which is exactly 40 hours.
Labor contracts already
require Greeks, Poles and Hungarians to work 40 hours per week, while
workers in France only have to spend 35 hours on the job.
A
risk of deflation?
Other economic experts cautioned
however that extending the work week could actually harm Germany's
economy: The resulting lower hourly wages would dampen consumer spending
and lead to decreasing prices. "Should the 40-hour work week become the
norm here, we would face a risk of deflation," Peter Bofinger, a member of
the government's economic advisory council, told Berliner
Zeitung.
While some companies, such as carmaker BMW, said they
planned to look at longer work weeks in certain sectors, others, including
Deutsche Post, already have flexible contracts in place that allow work
weeks with up to 48 hours.
At Telekom, however, executives said a
longer work week was the last thing they needed. "Our problem isn't that
we have too much work to do, but rather too little, considering the number
of employees," said the company's CEO, Kai-Uwe Ricke, adding that Telekom
had recently lowered its average work week to 34
hours.
DW staff (win)