The sick leave culture that is German

 [[{“value”:”Germans are the “world champions in sick leave”, according to the head of the country’s biggest insurer, who was criticised for demanding that workers without a doctor’s note are unpaid for their first day off. With the economy slowing and the welfare system under pressure, Germany can ill afford its average per worker of 20
The post The sick leave culture that is German appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.”}]] 

Germans are the “world champions in sick leave”, according to the head of the country’s biggest insurer, who was criticised for demanding that workers without a doctor’s note are unpaid for their first day off.

With the economy slowing and the welfare system under pressure, Germany can ill afford its average per worker of 20 sick days a year, said Oliver Bäte, the chief executive of Allianz SE. The EU average is eight.

The figure of 20 days, based on research by the health insurer DAK, puts a further dent in Germany’s ailing work ethic reputation. Last April, Christian Lindner, then finance minister, admitted that the French, Italians and other nationalities worked “a lot more than we do”, after OECD data showed Germans put in significantly fewer working hours per year than their EU and British neighbours…

“In countries like Switzerland and Denmark people work a month longer per year on average — with comparable pay,” he pointed out.

Here is more from the Times of London.  If you can get through the gate, you will see it is Mexico that is the work ethic country.

The post The sick leave culture that is German appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

 Current Affairs, Data Source, Medicine 


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