FUTURE TALENT March-May 2019 | Page 53

he UK is one of the hardest- working countries in the world, when it comes to hours clocked up. The TUC estimates that 1.4 million people now do some work on every day of the week, with 3.3 million working 45 hours or longer. Yet, in terms of global productivity, we’re dragging our heels. Workers in Germany, for example, work almost six hours per week less than their UK equivalents, yet are 36% more productive. Looking at 2017 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) data, the most productive country in the world (GDP per hour worked) is Luxembourg, with a leisurely working week of just 29 hours. Something isn’t adding up. Perhaps the correlation isn’t really that surprising. As Nic Marks, CEO of Friday, a business focusing on measuring and improving employee happiness, explains, “miserable people do miserable work. And long-hours cultures breed misery”. This, in turn, harms productivity. Research has demonstrated the link between longer hours and March – May 2019 // 53