PARIS, Sept. 3, 2008

France Says Au Revoir To 35-Hour Work Week

New Law Allows Companies To Negotiate Out Of Rule That Has Drawn Both Ridicule And Envy

  • In this May 1, 1998 file photo, demonstrators hold union flags and a banner supporting the 35-hour work week during a May Day march in Paris. Photo

    In this May 1, 1998 file photo, demonstrators hold union flags and a banner supporting the 35-hour work week during a May Day march in Paris.  (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

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(AP)  France's decade-long experiment with a 35-hour work week is coming to an end, sort of.

A new law allows companies to negotiate their way out of a rule that has drawn both ridicule and envy in other countries and that France's labor minister calls a "straitjacket" on the economy.

Yet the law, which took effect just before France began returning from its long summer vacation, is meeting resistance from both workers and the employers it was meant to benefit, suggesting President Nicolas Sarkozy's headline reform may do little to boost growth.

The 35-hour law wasn't just about France. It set economists well beyond its borders to wondering: Is this the future of work in the developed world? Instead, the ensuing decade saw rich nations' workers laboring ever more and more. Indeed, even French workers today average 41 hours a week of labor, despite the 35-hour rule, thanks to overtime and the time worked by those, such as farmers and the self-employed, who aren't subject to the measure.

Nuclear plant technician Mikael Perniceni figures his free time is secure, regardless of this law being called the "coup de grace" for the 35-hour week.

The 28-year-old still expects to use some of his almost eight weeks of annual paid time off to travel to Salt Lake City next year to hear the University of Utah Singers, with plenty of time left over for visiting friends and family.

The reason for his insouciance: While the law permits companies to negotiate new, longer working time agreements with employees, few employers are expected to do so, because of a widespread reluctance to relive the often fraught negotiations that led to the current working time agreements, businesses and economists say. And a tough economic climate isn't helping.

The new law is the most high-profile of a series of economic reforms promised by the conservative Sarkozy, and workers' and employers' response will be watched closely as a barometer of how much further Sarkozy can go without unleashing the fearsome street protests that have stymied past attempts at reform.

France began its experiment with a shortened work week in 1998. The idea was that by shortening the work day, employers would be forced to hire more workers in a giant work-share scheme, helping reduce the country's chronically high unemployment rate of around 10 percent.

Fast Fact

A report by national statistics agency Insee estimated that around 350,000 new jobs were created between 1998 and 2002 thanks to the 35-hour-week policy.

The measure attracted considerable attention abroad, with some envy at the extra free time enjoyed by French workers offset by mocking references to the supposedly "lazy French" (despite the stereotype, the French rank among the world's most productive workers). Belgium, for example, cut its working week to 38 hours in 2003.

A report by national statistics agency Insee estimated that around 350,000 new jobs were created between 1998 and 2002 thanks to the 35-hour-week policy.

"But the boom was followed by a bust, with very slow job creation over the ensuing years, so for the whole 10-year period, the net result was zero," said Nicolas Bouzou, an economist at economic research firm Asteres.

Reforming the 35-hour law was one of Sarkozy's main pledges during last year's presidential campaign. Sarkozy says the measure was an economic mistake that did not create jobs as it was intended to do.

Lawmakers approved the new law in late July, and it came into force in mid-August, just in time for the mass return from vacation that the French refer to as "La Rentrée."

Employers' reluctance to make use of the law's provisions means its economic impact is likely to be minimal, Bouzou said.

Bouzou estimated that the whole package of economic reforms instituted so far by Sarkozy, of which the 35-hour reform is part, would tack on an additional 0.3 percentage point to economic growth next year.

The reform "is probably badly timed," agreed Laurence Boone, chief French economist at Barclays Capital. With the economy close to a recession, declining by 0.3 percent in the second quarter according to a provisional estimate, companies have little need for longer work weeks, Boone said.

Even businessmen who rail against the 35-hour workweek say they don't plan to make use of the new law, at least for now.

The 35-hour week is "a very bad thing, it devalued work, it's unhealthy and difficult," said Gilles Lecointre, founder and chief executive of Intercessio, a 150-person economic consulting firm in Paris.

But Lecointre, who also teaches at French business school Essec and has written a book on small and medium-sized companies, says he has no intention of ditching his company's 35-hour agreement.

"At Intercessio, the negotiations over the 35 hours for salaried employees were long and terrible. It destroyed relationships," Lecointre said, "We're not going to go back through that."

Lecointre recalls a bitter exchange with an employee who was blocking a deal because of a dispute over a few extra minutes of work per day. The working time debate resembled "haggling over a carpet with a rug merchant," Lecointre said.

Under the complicated legislation passed in 1998 and 1999, the legal work week was shortened from 39 to 35 hours, with no reduction in pay. Overtime was limited to 130 hours per year. White collar employees whose work schedules didn't permit a strict application of a seven-hour day were given about two weeks worth of extra holiday, so that once averaged out over the year their work week was also 35 hours.

In practice, French workers average 41 hours of labor a week, according to recent figures from France's statistics agency. That's more than Germany or Britain - and not much less than the 41.7 hours worked in the United States in 2006.

The new law retains the legal limit on working hours but allows companies to negotiate opt-outs with employees. It also lets companies increase the maximum number of working days for white-collar workers to 235 per year from 218 currently. The changes aim to put into practice Sarkozy's campaign slogan, "Work more to earn more."

He has promised not to abolish the 35 hours outright, however, as the measure is popular among workers.

Even though purchasing power is French voters' top concern according to polls, only 25 percent of French want to work more to earn more, according to a recent survey by the CSA polling firm.

Officials at France's largest companies seem reluctant to reopen the issue of working time.

Carrefour, the world's second-largest retailer, declined to comment, as did Michelin, Europe's largest tire-maker. Renault spokeswoman Sophie Perrier said France's largest carmaker is satisfied with the working time agreement it has had in place since 1999.

Two of France's powerful labor unions drew only a few hundred participants to a demonstration against the new law last month in Paris, which could indicate acceptance of the inevitable - or just the fact many employees were away on summer holidays.



© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by cbcrowe3 September 3, 2008 2:17 PM PDT
Well, in the USA, we have had very considerable productively increases since 1990. The question is, where has the money generated by this extra productivity gone? Not into the pockets of the worker, that''s for sure.

Something like 90% of the wealth in this country is owned by the top 1%. It was not this bad before the "Reagan Revolution" of 1980, and his trickle down economics. So, if you work people 40 hours, or even 50 hours, give them the benefits of the fruits of their labor instead of stuffing that money into the pockets of the rich.
Reply to this comment
by libsluv2spit September 3, 2008 4:30 PM PDT
France began its experiment with a shortened work week in 1998. The idea was that by shortening the work day, employers would be forced to hire more workers in a giant work-share scheme, helping reduce the country''s chronically high unemployment rate of around 10 percent.


**********

THESE are the very same people who has the balls to call this country facists and capitalists..

i have a few words for france..."vas te faire encule"
Reply to this comment
by mitywhity September 3, 2008 4:31 PM PDT
Absolutely pathetic populace there. They don''t believe in hard work, but come retirement time, they''ll expect it as if they actually earned it.
Reply to this comment
by tmittelstaed September 3, 2008 5:12 PM PDT
How ironic that posters to this blog who are extolling the virtues of working 40 hours instead of 35 hours are doing their posting in the middle of the business day. You praise work then goof around when your supposed to be doing it.
Reply to this comment
by jmurrieta1 September 3, 2008 8:58 PM PDT
Suck-hozy is following in Massah Bushit''s footsteps.

Coming soon to America--no more Saturdays off.

Bushit''s Billionaires need you to work your life away then die before they have to pay any taxes for your retirement.
Reply to this comment
by oneworldusa September 4, 2008 4:36 AM PDT
I would be good with a 4-day week, 9 hours a day (36 hours). Whomever thought it would be good to work someone 5 days a week and only allow them 2 days off to recover and have a little bit of what meager life they can conjure up should have been shot.

4 days is still more than half a week. Lets all go to 4-days a week, 9 hours a day and watch production increase substantially.
Reply to this comment
by oneworldusa September 4, 2008 4:37 AM PDT
Furthermore, as productivity increases, so should worker wages accordingly.
Reply to this comment
by skeezix06 September 4, 2008 6:17 AM PDT
Work till you drop.

More seriously, France is making a mistake. I guess it won''t be long till they''re in the same trap we''re in.
Reply to this comment
by babooph September 4, 2008 5:57 PM PDT
US politicains get 10 times more time off than any French worker-HOW FAST A VETO would appear if US workers got a manditory 2 weeks a year -when BUSH gets 2 weeks out of 8 !!!!!
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