35-hour workweek
Encyclopedia : 3 : 35 : 35H : 35-hour workweek
The 35-hour working week is a measure adopted first in France, in February 2000, under Prime Minister Lionel Jospin's administration; it was pushed by then Minister of Labour Martine Aubry. The previous legal duration of the workweek was 39 hours. The 35 hours is not an absolute limit, but any further working time is to be considered overtime. The law has since been substantially weakened.
Rationale
(See working time for further discussion of the health and leisure-related reasons for many nations to consider limited working weeks important.)The main stated objectives of the law were twofold:
- To reduce unemployment and yield a better repartition of work, in a context where some people work long hours while some others are unemployed. A 10.2% decrease in the hours extracted from each worker would, theoretically, require firms to hire correspondingly more workers, a remedy for unemployment.
- To take advantage of improvements in productivity of modern society in order to give workers some more personal time in order to enhance their quality of life.
Criticism
The 35-hour working week is highly controversial in France. Generally speaking, social democratic parties and labour unions support it, while conservative parties and the MEDEF employers' union oppose it. Critics of the 35-hour workweek have argued that it has failed to serve its purpose because an increase in recruitment has not occurred. According to them, firms, being stubbornly against hiring new workers, have instead simply increased per-hour production quotas. According to right-wing parties and economic commentators, French firms avoid hiring new workers in general because French work force regulations make it difficult to lay off workers during a poor economic period (see New Employment Contract and First Employment Contract laws passed in 2005 and 2006 by Villepin's administration).
Amendments to the law
The Raffarin administration, of which some members are vocal critics of the law, has gradually pushed for further relaxation of the legal working time requirements. On December 22, 2004, the French Parliament extended the maximum number of overtime hours per year from 180 to 220; on March 31, 2005, another law extended the possibilities of overtime hours.See also
References
External links
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