South Korea Cuts Its Work Limit From 68 Hours a Week To 52 (cnn.com) 103
An anonymous reader shares a report: South Korea has lowered its maximum working hours from 68 hours a week to 52 hours. The legislation, which went into effect Sunday, received overwhelming support in the National Assembly in an effort to limit the time employees spend on the job. South Korea has the third highest number of hours worked of 37 countries tracked by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, with the average person in South Korea working about 2,024 hours in 2017, or approximately 38.9 hours a week.
Great idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Now let's do that here in the US. No exceptions. If the job requires more than 50 hours to accomplish then you need more people doing it. If you can't afford to have more people doing the job then you shouldn't be in business.
or emergency OT pay say X2 rate or 120K+col min (Score:2)
or emergency OT pay say X2 rate or min pay rate 120K+col.
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Re:Great idea (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, all the research I've seen in this area says the opposite — that you can work maybe one 60-hour week before you start to lose productivity, and over the long term, you're no better off working 60 hours than 30 hours. Your productivity actually goes negative at around 45 hours, IIRC, and diminishing returns begin at 25 or 30 hours. I forget the exact numbers, but that's in the right ballpark. So you're almost always better off adding more people than working more hours, unless the need is very short-term.
The only companies that do well by forcing people to work crazy hours are game developers, and that's because they know they can burn out one group of devs and move on to the next set of suckers. For everybody else, it is generally self-defeating.
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The biggest problem is the many, many companies (though maybe not many software companies) that make people work more hours without paying them -- by classifying most of their employees as "management" with salaried positions, no matter how obviously they're not actually managers. There are millions of people forced to work 70 hour weeks for the same pay they'd get for a 40 hour week.
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Fuck you. I get more headhunters calling me than I can shake a stick at. You let me work the hours I want when I want or you can kiss my ass on my way out.
Treat me like shit, expect to be treated like shit.
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I really pity you. A life where you got nothing left but work must suck... have you considered getting professional help?
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The only companies that do well by forcing people to work crazy hours are game developers, and that's because they know they can burn out one group of devs and move on to the next set of suckers. For everybody else, it is generally self-defeating.
Those aren't NEARLY the only companies. Junior invetsment bankers routinely work 90 hour weeks for 2-3 years on end. i understand that it's no better in law, and Doctors have it EVEN WORSE.
Just think about that: you go to a hospital for a car accident at night, and you're getting a doctor who's been on shift for 24 straight hours.
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My entire reply was in the context of its parent, which was about programm
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But I'd be shocked if that was the majority of what a new lawyer ended up doing, unless by writing, you mean crafting nearly pure boilerplate contracts and wills. The hard stuff shouldn't be going to people just starting out.
Re: Great idea (Score:2)
Having done tax defense (a little bit like legal), programming, and financial work; sorry you are way off. Finance was the hardest one to do. Far too much stress with way too many highs and drops. Burn out happens very fast some days. Legal gets really hard to keep an idea straight figuring out what precedent is in scope.
As for "creativity" in programming. There isn't much. Most problems have already been solved and that is the bulk of the work. Yes there is still creativity that sets this solution apart
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Always seemed kind of insane to me that we want doctors and lawyers to work ridiculous hours in high stress jobs, when the consequences of them making mistakes are relatively severe.
Seems like if you have someone working 60 hours a week that's an indication that you actually need two people.
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Always seemed kind of insane to me that we want doctors and lawyers to work ridiculous hours in high stress jobs, when the consequences of them making mistakes are relatively severe.
Seems like if you have someone working 60 hours a week that's an indication that you actually need two people.
I think the theory for doctors and lawyers is that you have to be extremely dedicated and able to work well under stress, and so making you work long hours while you are training is a way of weeding out the ones who are just dilettantes.
Utter tosh, but that seems to be how it works.
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In the U.S., the medical cartel deliberately restricts the number of people who can become doctors in order to justify high salaries. They do this by restricting the number of students who can attend medical schools in the U.S., and by introducing a sort of hazing to reduce the number of people who want to become doctors. Some Americans avoid this by going to medical schools established by American doctors overseas precisely to deal with this problem, but the medical cartel takes other measures to make life
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We insist that only doctors can prescribe medication, although there are many, many countries that don't require doctor approval and do very well with that.
But our system prevents people from prescribing highly addictive painkillers willy-nilly!
What's that you say [washingtonpost.com]?
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Just think about that: you go to a hospital for a car accident at night, and you're getting a doctor who's been on shift for 24 straight hours.
Fortunately not, but then again, in my country the average survival rate in ERs is higher than in the US. Wonder why.
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You don't even need research to see this.
In a two-year span as a student I once graphed every page I read each week. This was in a technical subject where I went through each line and verified that it was true, so it wasn't casual reading.
The graph I got at the end was fascinating: it was like a sinusoidal graph with a period of about 2-3 weeks. After that much intense study time, I just lost the mental energy to be productive. Over a period of two years, my cumulative learning graph was pretty much exactly
That's average people (Score:2)
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I don't believe that this is true. I have yet to encounter anyone who could work extremely long hours consistently without their productivity falling through the floor. I've certainly encountered people who work long hours and achieve tolerable levels of productivity, but in every case, if you took someone with comparable amounts of experience and had them work a 35-hour week, that second person would get at least as much done, largely because of making
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This is very job dependent. And, from my own experience, a bit age dependent.
Jobs requiring a lot of thought are going to be affected much more so than that of a burger flipper.
In my 20-30s, I could sit and code all day, for weeks. Just feed me pizza and caffeine, and I was good to go. Now, as I'm creeping up on 60, pacing myself has become much more important.
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For average person, yes. This however ignores the well documented fact that in any given organisation, most of the productive work isn't done by the average worker. It's done by the hyper productive outliers. Rule of the thumb is that in any given organisation, half of productive work is done by the square root of total workers.
And these are the people who go to be high grade specialists and CEOs, can manage to live on 6 hours sleep a day and work essentially all of their waking hours. For decades. There's
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Yes, work outputs goes down after so many hours, but programming output also goes down the more people you add to a project.
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I respectfully disagree. I work with a lot of guys working "Seattle Hundreds" that are productive. I used to be able to work those hours, but at my age I really start getting confused and my short-term memory shot after about sixty hours a week, but I'm almost twice as old as my coworkers. Communication and understanding the problem and the code is such a tremendous overhead that it's more efficient to have developers regularly work 80+ hour weeks.
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It's for "businesses with more than 300 employees, state-run agencies and government offices".
From the same article [straitstimes.com]:
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They need a comprehensive overhaul of labour laws. 37.5 hour standard working week, legal maximum of 48 hours.
At least 25 days holiday based on that 37.5 hours/week, if you work more or less then holiday time scales by the same amount. Regular overtime increases your holiday allowance. Employer must allow you to take all of it every year, and any kind of punishment for taking it or benefit for not taking it (bonuses, promotions etc.) is illegal.
Strong and free-for-the-employee tribunals to oversee it all an
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Right. No exceptions. If you're a firefighter, and you hit your 50 hour mark and the forest fire that has every person in the area working on it is still burning, walk away and let it burn.
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I guess the “no exception” was meant in the sense “no category of worker should be exhempt from the 50/w limit”.
This doesn’t mean you cannot have exeptions to the 50/w limit in some weeks even if your category must comply with it: usually regulations take into account and allowfor emergencies, require proper compensation and might impose fines if overtime work is found to be structural and not exceptional as it should be.
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I prefer to take it now. Don't like it? Kiss my ass on my way out to the interview with the next guy that wants me.
Ya know, me having a VERY rare and VERY high demand skill set kinda means that you can kiss my ass. If I let you. But then again, why would I even want to work for assholes like you?
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Mostly because those people are being added long, long after it would have been necessary. Of course you cannot sensibly train new personnel when you're already hitting an emergency, you can only do it when you actually have time to train new people.
Unfortunately management is too stupid to notice it and too stubborn to listen to those that do notice it.
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I know they look alike, but that's actually Ayn Rand. It's a common mistake.
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I work to live, I don't live to work. I pity you if you define yourself by what and how much your work, you must be a very, very sad being.
Less than Tesla (Score:2)
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12 hours shifts but still limited by law to a maximum number of hours per week, meaning they work less than five days per week.
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38.9 hours a week. ? Thats weak (Score:1)
Re:38.9 hours a week. ? Thats weak (Score:4, Funny)
I show up for 40 hours a week. They get about 5 hours of work out of me, if they're lucky.
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I tell my boss that Slashdot is how I keep my skills sharp.
I just hope she doesn't ask which skills.
Obligatory Office Space (Score:2)
Bob Slydell: You see, what we're trying to do is get a feeling for how people spend their time at work so if you would, would you walk us through a typical day, for you?
Peter Gibbons: Yeah.
Bob Slydell: Great.
Peter Gibbons: Well, I generally come in at least fifteen minutes late, ah, I use the side door - that way Lumbergh can't see me, heh - after that I sorta space out for an hour.
Bob Porter: Da-uh? Space out?
Peter Gibbons: Yeah, I just stare at my desk, but it looks like I'm working. I do that for probabl
Re:38.9 hours a week. ? Thats weak (Score:5, Insightful)
vote union we really them now more then even EU (Score:3, Insightful)
vote union we really them now more then even EU worker rights are so good
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No. What we need more than ever is punctuation!
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"The average person in South Korea worked about 2024 hours in 2017, or approximately 38.9 hours a week."
This falls within the standard 35~40 hours per week, doesn't it?
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There's plenty of other "gotchas" that might be built in such as taking the total number of hours divided by 52 weeks in a year, without accounting that the average person has several weeks of vacation so that the real
Re:Only 52 (Score:4, Informative)
A few factors to consider, depend on the exact methodology used.:
1. People not in the workforce, such as children and retirees.
2. Part timers.
3. Vacation time.
Just two weeks vacation turns a 40 hour week into a 38.5 workweek.
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Judging by this blurp,
I'm guessing the figure includes people who are working part-time (or possibly not even working at all, if it is a "per-capita" number of hours worked).
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Ffs. Simple maths too hard for you?
That's 38.9 hours every single week. Which is a stupid measurement, but none the less.
Workers in South Korean work their arses of. The problem with this new law is it will be ignored as much at the old one.
In large companies 60 hours is generally considered the minimum, with more expected of you want a promotion.
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2024 hours in the year average: 52 weeks in a year, -15 public holidays not falling on a weekend, - 15 mandatory vacation days = 46 weeks.
The average person worked 44 hours in a week. So no, not within the standard.