nettime's_roving_correspondent on Thu, 9 Jul 1998 19:09:26 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Unwork v2.09b7; or, The Future Is Now (So It's Time to Go Home) |
When working too hard is a crime for French corporate climbers (Guardian; 06/16/98) SUCCESS, as every keen young executive knows, comes to those who start early, finish late and take a bulging briefcase home at the weekend. So pity the French corporate climbers who are discovering that working too hard has become a crime. Before a controversial plan to reduce the working week to 35 hours comes into effect, the government has started raiding companies to make sure executives and other professionals are not putting in more hours than the current legal limit of 39 a week. "Several thousand violations have been reported at four or five big companies we have looked at," a spokeswoman at the employment and solidarity ministry said. "They are test cases, really. The status of upper-level employees, management and others, has to be clarified." The raids, carried out by the ministry's 420 inspectors often on tip-offs from trade unionists, have led to bizarre scenes at some companies, according to an investigation by the International Herald Tribune newspaper. Senior engineers and executives trying to conclude a key contract at a subsidiary of the telecommunications giant Alcatel were surprised to find the job police in their midst at 7pm one evening this year, demanding to know why they were working so late. In another case, about 1,500 violations of working hours uncovered at a subsidiary of the defence electronics group Thomson-CSF left senior managers facing fines of up to pounds 50,000 each. After negotiations with the ministry, the company agreed to close its corporate headquarters at 7pm every day. "We have been warned about this," a junior executive at one of the country's leading DIY chain stores said. "We haven't been inspected yet, as far as we know - but we've been told to be careful. The inspectors can apparently be very devious." Some reports have claimed that several inspectors have gone so far as to photograph car licence plates in company car parks to deduce their owners' working hours, and to monitor personal computers to make sure that no work was being sneaked home. Last month the French parliament approved a draft bill cutting the legal working week from 39 hours to 35 hours by 2000, a victory for the Socialist prime minister, Lionel Jospin, who had made the measure a key plank of his election campaign last summer. The law calls for all companies with more than 20 staff to institute the 35- hour week by January 1 2000. Smaller firms have two more years to comply, and businesses will be offered tax or other incentives in the first year if they act before the deadline. The law has been condemned by business leaders, who say it will lead to higher costs, reduced competitiveness and job losses. But Mr Jospin argues that it will help ease France's 12 per cent unemployment rate by spreading jobs around. Exactly how the law will work will be defined by legislation due next year, but it is already clear that one of the key problems will be its application to cadres - company management, executives and skilled professionals who generally work long hours. According to the employment ministry, the inspections have been suspended to allow for negotiations on how this group, who make up nearly a quarter of the workforce, will be affected. For the time being, however, keen young executives may be better off watching the clock than putting in unpaid overtime. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl