
Spain's government approves a bill that reduces the workweek from 40 to 37.5 hours
Workers in Spain may soon have 2.5 more hours of weekly rest.
The Spanish government approved a bill Tuesday reducing the workweek from 40 to 37.5 hours.
Twelve and a half million full-time and part-time private sector workers will benefit from the reduction, expected to improve productivity and reduce absenteeism, according to the Ministry of Labor.
'Today we are modernizing the world of labor and helping people to be a little happier,' said Vice President and Labor Minister Yolanda Díaz.
The measure, which already applies to civil servants and some sectors, will mainly affect the retail, manufacturing, hospitality, and construction industries, Díaz added.
The parliament, where the left-wing coalition government doesn't have enough votes, will have to approve the bill for it to come into effect.
The main trade unions support the proposal, unlike the business association.
Sumar, the leftist minority partner of President Pedro Sánchez's Socialist Party, proposed the bill.
The Catalan nationalist party Junts, an occasional ally of Sánchez's coalition, expressed concern over what they said were the bill's negative consequences for small companies and the self-employed.
Spain has had a 40-hour workweek since 1983, when it was reduced from 48 hours.
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The Guardian
9 hours ago
- The Guardian
Spanish police's plea for respect backfires over photo of old women alfresco
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The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
‘People were repressed into silence': the Spanish artist creating a visual memory of fascism's horrors
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He also knows that some have accused Spain's socialist-led government – whose democratic memory ministry is organising the exhibition at the Instituto Cervantes – of playing politics with the past. But then political polarisation, he added, was hardly a problem unique to Spain. 'In Germany, you have parties that are questioning things that everyone had thought had been settled and you have these nationalist movements erupting in Europe and the US and you have [Javier] Milei attacking historical memory in Argentina,' said Roca. 'It's a bad time for society, but it allows authors to reflect on this and to find stories that had been consigned to oblivion.' And that, said the artist, was what it was all about: the odd individual trying to give the voices of the past a decent, if belated, hearing. It can sometimes be a lonely business – and solitude is another of the exhibition's themes. Roca pointed to a glass-topped cabinet that held an old pencil drawing of a boy in jeans and a T-shirt crouching over a desk. 'I found this sketch that my drawing teacher did of me in 1980,' he said. 'I'm still in that same position, alone and hunched over a piece of paper.'


BBC News
a day ago
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