Houston Chronicle Sunday

A European works 19 percent less than average American, study says

- By Ben Steverman

Americans are addicted to their jobs. U.S. workers not only put in more hours than workers do almost anywhere else. They’re also increasing­ly retiring later and taking fewer vacation days.

A new study tries to measure precisely how much more Americans work than Europeans do overall. The answer: The average person in Europe works 19 percent less than the average person in the U.S. That’s about 258 fewer hours per year, or about an hour less each weekday. Another way to look at it: U.S. workers put in almost 25 percent more hours than Europeans.

Hours worked vary a lot by country, according to the unpublishe­d working paper by economists Alexander Bick of Arizona State University, Bettina Bruggemann of McMaster University in Ontario, and Nicola Fuchs-Schundeln of Goethe University Frankfurt. Swiss work habits are most similar to Americans’, while Italians are the least likely to be at work, putting in 29 percent fewer hours per year than Americans do.

The study was designed to make it easier to compare countries to each other, by capturing the overall hours per person, not just for people with jobs. That incorporat­es not just the length of the typical workweek but also retirement, vacation, unemployme­nt, and other time spent out of the workforce.

Not all time spent at the office, shop, or factory is time well spent; output is also critical to the productivi­ty equation. But it’s important to have a reliable calculatio­n of hours worked per person to accurately measure productivi­ty, the amount of economic value nations get out of each hour their citizens spend working. The study’s detailed data could help researcher­s figure out why Americans toil so much longer than Europeans and which factors most influence productivi­ty.

One theory is that Americans work longer hours because their additional effort is more likely to pay off. People earn a wider range of incomes in the U.S., so “workers have an incentive to try harder to move up the job ladder because a promotion is worth more,” said Dora Gicheva, an economist at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, citing a study that compared the U.S. with Germany.

Taxes are an issue. Despite what Donald Trump has said, taxes in the U.S. are substantia­lly lower than in Europe. Studies have suggested that this higher tax burden reduces the incentive to earn more by putting in extra hours.

“Americans are indeed richer than Europeans, and one reason why is because of taxes that depress the incentives to work in Europe,” said Lee Ohanian, an economist at the University of California-Los Angeles.

Maybe the key factor is that labor unions, along with other worker protection­s, are much stronger in Europe than in the U.S. “The data strongly suggest that labor regulation and unionizati­on appear to be the dominant factors explaining the difference­s between the United States and Europe,” economists at Harvard and Dartmouth concluded in a 2006 study.

Generous pensions in Europe are also a strong factor in discouragi­ng older people from working, the study said. In the U.S., more people over 65 are working than at any point in the past 50 years. The U.S.’s shift from traditiona­l pensions to 401(k) plans makes it harder for Americans to know when it’s safe to retire.

As recently as the early 1970s, according to several studies, people in the U.S. and Western Europe worked about the same number of hours per week.

 ?? Kevin Lamarque / Associated Press ?? A cyclist passes flags of Switzerlan­d and the Canton of Geneva as she goes along the shore of Lake Geneva. Swiss work habits are most similar to those of Americans, according to researcher­s.
Kevin Lamarque / Associated Press A cyclist passes flags of Switzerlan­d and the Canton of Geneva as she goes along the shore of Lake Geneva. Swiss work habits are most similar to those of Americans, according to researcher­s.

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