[Mb-civic] Bone-Tired? You Need a Job in Europe LATimes
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Aug 11 09:49:19 PDT 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ferguson11aug11.story
COMMENTARY
Bone-Tired? You Need a Job in Europe
The work ethic in the EU wanes as time on the job expands in U.S.
By Niall Ferguson
Niall Ferguson is a professor of history at Harvard University. His latest
book, "Colossus: The Price of American Empire," was published this year by
Penguin.
August 11, 2004
LONDON In Europe, nothing happens in August. It is not, of course, that
absolutely everyone is on holiday. There are still an unhappy few slogging
in to work. But the commuter train is half empty, the flow of traffic at
rush hour is uncannily smooth. Virtually no serious decision can be taken in
a London office throughout this month because there is always at least one
key executive on holiday.
The effect of high summer on other European cities is even more dramatic.
>From Bastille Day on, for instance, Paris is a Parisian-free zone.
Yet such is not the case in the United States. Having spent a week in what
apparently remains the terrorists' favorite target, I can confirm that
despite the sweltering heat and multiplying mosquitoes, it is still business
as usual in Manhattan. The city's familiar rhythm of work is scarcely
interrupted by the fact that it is summer. Only a select few take themselves
off for the summer to Martha's Vineyard.
Why is this? For one thing, Americans have much shorter vacations than
Europeans. While German, Italian and French workers enjoy, on average, more
than 40 days of vacation a year, the average American has to make do with
just two weeks.
But this is only part of a growing transatlantic disparity in patterns of
work.
There are, for example, many more Europeans out of work than Americans;
over the last decade, U.S. unemployment has averaged 4.6%, compared with
9.2% for the European Union.
Then there is the familiar European penchant for strikes. Between 1992 and
2001, the Spanish economy lost, on average, 271 days per thousand employees
as a result of industrial action. For Denmark, Italy, Finland, Ireland and
France, the figures lay between 80 and 120. The figure for the United States
was just 50.
Nor should we forget what the English like to call the "sickie." It was
reported last week that employees of the Royal Mail one in every 17 of
whom call in sick on an average day are to be offered a novel incentive to
show up. From now on, those Stakhanovite types who turn up for all their
shifts for six months will be entered in a drawing to win a new Ford Focus.
In the U.S., of course, the approach is different. Workers who consistently
miss work because they are feeling under the weather are given the chance to
miss it on a permanent basis by being fired.
Perhaps the most striking of all the differences between American and
European working patterns relates to working hours. In 1999, according to
the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the average
American in employment worked just under 2,000 hours a year (1,976). The
average German worked just 1,535 fully 22% less. According to a recent
U.S. study, the average Frenchman works a staggering 32% less.
Twenty-five years ago, this gap between U.S. and European working hours
didn't exist. Between 1979 and 1999, the average American working year
lengthened by 50 hours, or nearly 4%. But the average German working year
shrank 12%. The same was true elsewhere in Europe.
How are we to explain this divergence? The obvious answer is European
legislation like the French 35-hour week or the recent British reduction of
the hours worked by junior doctors. Another theory points to differences in
marginal rates of taxation.
But I see another possible explanation one that owes a debt to the German
sociologist Max Weber's famous essay on "The Protestant Work Ethic and the
Spirit of Capitalism," written a century ago.
Weber believed he had identified a link between the rise of Protestantism
(and especially Calvinism) and the development of "the spirit of
capitalism." I would like to propose a modern version of Weber's theory,
namely "The Atheist Sloth Ethic and the Spirit of Collectivism."
You see, the most remarkable thing about the transatlantic divergence in
working patterns is that it has coincided almost exactly with a comparable
divergence in religiosity, both in terms of observance and belief.
According to the Gallup Millennium Survey of religious attitudes (conducted
in 1999), 48% of people in Western Europe nowadays almost never go to
church; the figure for Eastern Europe is just a little lower at 44%. In the
Netherlands, Britain, Germany, Sweden and Denmark, less than one in 10 of
the population now attends church at least once a month. Only in Catholic
Italy and Ireland does more than a third of the population worship once a
month or more often.
By contrast, more than twice as many North Americans as Europeans attend
religious services once a week or more.
I do not say this is the sole explanation for the fact that London today is
lethargic while New York toils away as usual. But there is surely something
more than coincidental about the simultaneous rise of unbelief in Europe and
the decline of Weber's work ethic.
If I weren't on holiday, I'd write a book about it.
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