• Dojan
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    English
    21 year ago

    That’s standard here in Sweden.

    What isn’t standard is forcing students to work extra. There are also limits on how much time certain professions can work, mostly for safety reasons. If you work as a trucker you are only allowed to drive for so many hours before forcing a break, and only so many hours in the span of 24 hours and a week.

    As far as I know, Germany has a decent set of labour laws but the follow up on infractions is scarce.

    I’ve a friend that works 60-80 hours a week while juggling his uni degree. The work is part of it as far as I understand. Thus his pay is also not in accordance with the role he has. In short, exploitation.

    Sure I’d rather live and work in Germany any day, but if given the option, I’d not leave Sweden.