Re: Workers Are on the Job More Hours over the Course of the Year (was Working hours)

On May 14, 2007, at 10:03 AM, Yoshie Furuhashi wrote:

Here’s a table that presents useful international comparison of annual hours worked: “Table F. Average Annual Hours Actually Worked per Person in Employment,” http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/53/15/36900060.pdf. Calculated on this basis, the annual hours worked per person peaked in the mid-1990s in the USA, but US workers probably continue to feel the family time crunch — especially paucity of paid vacation time spent together – as long as more and more women work for longer and longer hours over the course of the year.

The OECD figures show annual hours to be lower in 2005 than in 1979.

The last part of what you write isn’t true; female participation
peaked in 2000, declined in the recession, and has yet to match its
old peak. And the workweek is just minutes off its all time low, set
in 2005, since data began in 1964.

There’s no doubt that Americans work more than most other people
(though the Koreans have us beat by a long shot), and that our
vacations are scandalously short. But the absolute levels of leisure
just are nowhere near as short as Juliet Schor would have you believe.

Doug

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