- cross-posted to:
- europe
- cross-posted to:
- europe
“We were elected to implement an aggressive reform program. And that is what we are doing now. We now have three years without further elections ahead of us, our performance will be assessed in 2027.”
It almost sounds like a threat from the conservative Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. His centre-right party Nea Dimokratia With 28.3 percent of the vote, it easily took first place in the European elections, almost twice as many as the left-wing opposition party Syriza (14.9 percent). However, it remained far below the 33 percent target set by Mitsotakis.
The reason given was the currently largest It rises of the Greeks: the high Cost of living,According to the Bank of Greece, 27 percent of the Greek population spends more than 40 percent of their income on housing costs.
Mitsotakis wants to counteract this – and focuses on employer-friendly measureswhich, however, causes the unions and left-wing politicians to cry out.
Employees must be informed 24 hours in advance
From 1 July Employers may invite their employees to Six-day week This will make Greece the first country in the EU to introduce a 41-hour working week. Previously, this was only possible in the tourism and food industries, but now the arrangement of a sixth working day is permitted for all private and publicly controlled industries (but not civil servants). The employee must have at least 24 hours before For the sixth working day, a Surcharge von 40 percent of the daily wage; 115 percent if the day falls on a public holiday.
Overtime is not possible. The day must be entered into a system that is to be controlled by the state.
This is intended to ensure that “industrial companies with rotating shift work and highly specialised staff do not have to interrupt their processes,” quotes the HE DOES the Greek Ministry of Labour. Furthermore, every employee also has the right to eleven consecutive hours off work per day or night and to 24 hours every seven days.
Up to two jobs
But critics stress that workers are already under a lot of pressure: wages are too low, and many Greeks are forced to work two jobs to cover the cost of living – about eight hours a day in one job and up to five hours a day in the other.
Also that the Right of termination to be relaxed, will tighten working conditions: employers are to be first year can dismiss the employee at any time. Mitsotakis wants to encourage companies to hire more people: The Unemployment rate in Greece is twice as high as the Eurozone average (2023: 10.9 percent). Social security contributions employers should be reduced. A reduction in the VATwhich is often seen by left-wing economists as an effective measure to combat inflation, the Prime Minister vehemently rules out.
Protest by trade unions in September of last year when the law passed parliament.
Many working hours, but little productivity:
Economists have long complained about the low labour productivity in Greece – one of the lowest in the EU, while Greek workers already have the longest working hours in Europe compared to the EU. The German Federal Statistical Office According to 2022, an average of 41 hours per week, the European average was 37 hours per week. In Austria The average working hours per week were 35.7. The lowest value was reported for the Netherlands at 31.3 hours per week – due to the high proportion of employed people in part-time employment (43.4 percent).
We need to focus on increasing productivity and automating processes, otherwise the competitiveness of the country is not sustainable. This could also be achieved with a Reduction of working hours cites the HE DOES the head of the German-Greek Chamber of Industry and CommerceAthanassios Kelemis.
Economists have long complained about the low labour productivity in Greece – one of the lowest in the EU, while Greek workers already have the longest working hours in Europe compared to the EU.
Surely, making the hours longer will completely solve this and not make people spend even more time on cookie clicker.
The productivity per hour will almost surely go down
Which will cause those titans of honesty and intellect to lenghten the hours again.
I won’t even mention how scummy and useless measure productivity is when compared between capitalist core country like Germany and periphery like Greece.
Wait for this to be rolled out all over the West™ while they bring back child labour
They are already talking about that
But don’t forget the slave labor!
Hello, I’m here to apologize for the lack of terror. Someone needs to do it, might as well be me
Is it legal to sell guillotines on Etsy? Asking for a friend.
death to america
that… is the opposite of the correct direction to improve productivity
the capitalists can’t even be evil correctly ffs
except it one of the ways capitalists use to extract surplus. increasing the working day or in this increasing working hours, is a way to increase extracting surplus value, mainly absolute surplus value.
at a much diminished margin I’m sure
yea, especially to the detriment of the worker as well to either an early death or tons of health complications from overwork.
However it is the correct direction to increase the mass of aggregate profits
Stalin should’ve armed the KKE
Subsection 1 of Trueanon rules for life item 6: never give up your weapons, period
europe was a mistake
We need to shut down Europe until we figure out what the hell is going on
start by shutting down the usa
just shut down capitalism already
First of all,
27 percent of the Greek population spends more than 40 percent of their income on housing costs.
isn’t that better than most of US cities?
I wish I only paid 40% to housing.
if my employer invited me to a 6 day workweek, I would interpret it as an invitation to his home in the middle of the night to play an exciting game of “Scorpions”
Meanwhile in manufacturing: “First time working 6 (or 7) days a week?”
edit: I sympathize with anyone having to work a 6th day in a week under normal circumstances, but tbh my ability to sympathize goes out the window when I’m staring down a 6 day week this week, and had a 7 day week last week.
i used to work as a seasonal vegetable picker during summers in the deep south. sub minimum wage, no health insurance, shady housing that came out of my pay and went into a boss’ pocket (uninspected, no air conditioning, buggy), 7 days a week, 10+ hour days. i got a day off once after 45 days straight in a row, when i accidentally sheared the tip of my index finger because i was losing consciousness on my feet during a particularly hot and humid morning.
i could pull the “i don’t sympathize with anyone except people who have it tougher than this”, but that is entirely unproductive in the context of worker solidarity, right? is it really hard to sympathize with an entire nation being told that they are losing half of their time off? no one should have to exist like this and any time workers are seeing their conditions worsen, we should all denounce it. an attack on one is an attack on all, not an opportunity to trivialize the wound.
my ability to sympathize goes out the window
reactionary
Holy shit Greeks already work the longest hours in Europe.
deleted by creator
So there’s gonna be riots yea?
is it a day ending in y?
In Greek no day name ends in y
touche
damn, frontex must be getting too much overtime pay
Still better than the “supporting a family by being shift lead at taco bell” situation that exists in every fast food franchise in America. Basically being on-call 24/7 for $45k/yr
just leave the eu and make your own currency lol
Death to America
Oh, so that means they’re reducing work hours per day, so each day only has about 6 hours of work in it, right?
It is a 41 hour week over 6 days… here we do 40 hours over 5 so id say it sounds like less per day