Hey?! Whereโs Merica? Freedom land with the 2nd most incarcerated
I think some countries are missing here.
How is this always a comment? Of course, there are a lot more countries in Europe and the world. I suggest you search for a CSV file and create your own diagram. :)
Or one has to deal with the fact that not every picture includes everything.
Enjoy the data. ๐บ
Because youโre biasing the diagram by deliberately excluding data. You could have excluded the best. Or the worst. Or some in between so two look close together but arenโt. Or it could look more uniform than it really is. Excluding data and not being transparent and upfront with is, is skewing things.
Excluding the US in a chart subtitled โEuropean life-work balanceโ is bad, noted
I think some countries are missing here.
Iโd guess that theyโre using Eurostat data, but the UK is present, and they stopped participating in Eurostat when they left the EU. So either itโs not that, or itโs old data.
A bit off-topic, but I kind of wish that the UK and some of the other countries in Europe could participate in some level of voluntary, best-effort participating to share data. Like, okay, if youโre not in the EU, you arenโt bound to use the same statistical standards that EU members are, but I am pretty sure that some countries do or donโt care, and itโs kind of obnoxious that it makes it harder to compare datasets spanning all of Europe.
Spain? Wtf Iโm shocked ๐ฎ
I have no idea how they measure their work-life balance index, but IIRC Spain still has a limited degree of the siesta showing up in places. Like, my understanding is that your random office in Madrid wouldnโt do it, but in a town back in the backcountry may have businesses that do so.
googles
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siesta
In modern Spain, the midday nap during the working week has largely been abandoned among the adult working population.[16] According to a 2009 survey, 16.2 percent of Spaniards polled claimed to take a nap โdailyโ, whereas 22 percent did so โsometimesโ, 3.2 percent โweekends onlyโ and the remainder, 58.6 percent, โneverโ. The share of those who claimed to have a nap daily had diminished by 7 percent compared to a previous poll in 1998. Nearly three out of four siesta-takers claimed to take siestas on the sofa rather than the bed.
English-language media often conflates the siesta with the two to three hour lunch break that is characteristic of Spanish working hours,[18] even though the working population is less likely to have time for a siesta and the two events are not necessarily connected. In fact, the average Spaniard works longer hours than almost all their European counterparts (typically 11-hour days, from 9 am to 8 pm).
Huh.
Yeah, It depends on which sector you are focusing.
The office sector normally has an 8-hour workday, from 8am to 5pm with a mandatory hour for lunch or similar. Other offices may have a 7 to 3pm with no time for lunch, like in the Banking or Public sector.
But, in the countryside people that work on farms and greenhouses normally work more than that, although, that is a minimal percentage of the population.
In hot areas of the country, like the south or the spanish plateau is imposible and dangerous to work at midday on open fields, because of UV radiation and high temperatures, so normally they stop working and return home to eat, rest and go back to work later when the UV hazard has decreased. Those people are the ones that tipically have siestas, because of the long hours during the day 7am to 8pm and the physical effort that they need to perform in the workours.
Iโm surprised to see the UK significantly ahead of Sweden.