• @[email protected]
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    371 year ago

    The UK being that high makes me feel very sorry for everyone in the countries ranked lower

    • @[email protected]
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      181 year ago

      Yeah, we moved from Germany to the UK a year or so ago and are about to move back pretty much specifically because of this.

      Maybe it’s just London, but here there is a really prevalent “hustle culture” and everyone is doing things like joining work calls during their holidays or not having a lunch break and then working 9 hours anyways.

      Not to mention you get less holidays and things like being sick or maternity leave are terrible headaches in comparison.

      So all in all, for us at least its been a shock! Ib would be interested to know what metrics they are using for work-life balance, because it likely doesn’t match what I would choose.

    • @bi_tux
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      71 year ago

      It’s weird tho, because Austria is ranked way lower, but in my experience it ain’t that bad

      • theinspectorst
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        71 year ago

        I think the problem is that it’s difficult to think of this on a country-by-country basis. I’m in the UK. One of my friends works for a hedge fund in London and has an appalling work-life balance, long hours, little opportunity to work-from-home. Another works for a charity based in London while working-from-home in a regional city for all but one day of the month, and works reasonable hours and gets every other Friday off. My own experience is somewhere in the middle. The difference between our individual experiences in the UK will dwarf the differences between the UK and another European country.

        I can completely believe that your own relative experiences of Austria and the UK could be very different to what’s shown in the diagram because work-life balance is so much more dependent on what line of work you’re in, who your employer is, what stage you’re at in your career, etc. Except in extreme cases, these things will count for more than national differences.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Another reason it can be tough is that certain metrics are defined differently between counties.

          Many metrics will list the UK a having one of the highest holiday allowances in Europe since legally full-time workers are entitles to 28 days off, however the UK includes Bank Holidays (8-9 days) in this total. For comparison, a country like Austria has a minimum of 5 weeks holiday (25 days) but this is IN ADDITION TO state holidays (of which there are 13, but some will be on weekends so the absolute amount varies year to year). Centrally this end up with everyone in Austria having something like 33-34 days off.

          I’ve yet to see a list that accounts for this, so most have the UK right near the top. I would bet that this metric is no different.

        • @nodimetotie
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          21 year ago

          You make an interesting point that is often true in general. That within differences are bigger than between differences.