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By h.b. - Nov 8, 2006 - 7:36 AM
• Spanish sleepy heads - Mar 25, 2008 - 7:53 AM
• The portrait of a happy Spaniard - Mar 18, 2008 - 10:09 PM
The Finnish Minister for Employment, Tarja Filatov (left) with her French counterpart, Gerard Larcher, talking in Brussels yesterday - Photo EFE
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Spain refuses to extend the working week in EU talks
EDITORIAL COMMENT -
Many foreigners visiting Spain wonder when Spaniards sleep. With the working day stretching into the evening, and the last meal of the day often not starting until ten o’clock when on earth do Spaniards hit the sack?
Even allowing for the luxury of an afternoon siesta for those who live close enough to home, the sums are hard to work out.
Yesterday Spain and another four European countries, France, Italy Greece and Cyprus, blocked a measure to increase the European limit to the working week which currently stands at 48 hours. It’s stalemate for an argument which has been going on in the EU for the past three years. Different countries have different cultural attitudes to work.
A favourite expression among Spaniards is ‘I work to live, not live to work’, and of course longer working hours would not go with that, and what’s more the Minister for Employment, Jesús Caldera, is on record as saying that a 48 hour working week limit was enough and any legislation which allowed more than that, as in the U.K. opt out, should disappear. In fact last year the British wanted to increase the limit to 65 hours, believe it or not, but that was, not unsurprisingly, rejected.
Finding the balance between work and home life is a difficult one in such competitive times, and finding the time to sleep soundly to be fresh and ready for a full day’s work the next morning also has its complications when one lives in Spain.
But surely a 48 hour working week is enough, with or without a siesta.
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• Spanish sleepy heads - Mar 25, 2008 - 7:53 AM
• The portrait of a happy Spaniard - Mar 18, 2008 - 10:09 PM
• A 90 minute siesta can improve your memory according to new research - Jan 17, 2008 - 8:13 PM
• Statistics and the Siesta - Oct 9, 2007 - 7:25 AM
• Man shoots his wife as she was sleeping a siesta - Sep 2, 2006 - 11:04 PM
Comments
Delgado Rubio
08 Nov 2006, 11:09
08 Nov 2006, 11:09
Time is Gold
jai weaver
09 Nov 2006, 04:01
09 Nov 2006, 04:01
not even in the USA do we work this hard! 65 hours a week?
We all giggled when the world stock market had mentioned that they were trying to get Spain to not have siesta time. God and Spain forbid it!
We all giggled when the world stock market had mentioned that they were trying to get Spain to not have siesta time. God and Spain forbid it!
ruth
09 Nov 2006, 07:07
09 Nov 2006, 07:07
ay Carumba, you are not taking into consideration the FIESTA factor. I may
take a SIESTA when I can in the afternoon, but modern life is making that
harder and harder BUT even though I work about 10 hours a day...I have
vacation...holiday...FIESTA for 19 days at Christmas & Easter, and at least
4 weeks in summer and there are numerous long weekends with local, national
and regional holidays.
¡Viva le Republica!
¡Viva le Republica!
Please keep to the subject. Opinions published here are of our visitors, not the Typically Spanish team. Comments which go against Spanish laws or which are libellous are not allowed. We reserve the right to delete any comment we wish.
Por favor, céntrate en el tema. Son las opiniones de los internautas, y no las de Typically Spanish. No está permitido verter comentarios contrarios a las leyes españolas o injuriantes. Reservado el derecho a eliminar los comentarios que consideremos fuera de tema.
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Por favor, céntrate en el tema. Son las opiniones de los internautas, y no las de Typically Spanish. No está permitido verter comentarios contrarios a las leyes españolas o injuriantes. Reservado el derecho a eliminar los comentarios que consideremos fuera de tema.
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