Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Why is America the 'no-vacation nation'? - CNN.com

Why is America the 'no-vacation nation'?

By A. Pawlowski, CNN
May 23, 2011 -- Updated 1246 GMT (2046 HKT)
Thinking of getting away? You probably have much less vacation than workers in other parts of the world.
Thinking of getting away? You probably have much less vacation than workers in other parts of the world.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Employers in the United States are not obligated to offer any paid vacation
  • Vacation is mandated by law in many other parts of the world
  • Poll: Only 57% of U.S. workers use up all of the vacation days they're entitled to
  • Study: Working more makes Americans happier than Europeans

(CNN) -- Let's be blunt: If you like to take lots of vacation, the United States is not the place to work.

Besides a handful of national holidays, the typical American worker bee gets two or three precious weeks off out of a whole year to relax and see the world -- much less than what people in many other countries receive.

And even that amount of vacation often comes with strings attached.

Some U.S. companies don't like employees taking off more than one week at a time. Others expect them to be on call or check their e-mail even when they're lounging on the beach or taking a hike in the mountains.

"I really would like to take a real, decent vacation and travel somewhere, but it's almost impossible to take a long vacation and to be out of contact," said Don Brock, a software engineer who lives in suburban Washington.

"I dream of taking a cruise or a trip to Europe, but I can't imagine getting away for so long."

The running joke at Brock's company is that a vacation just means you work from somewhere else. So he takes one or two days off at a time and loses some vacation each year. Only 57% of U.S. workers use up all of the days they're entitled to, compared with 89% of workers in France, a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll found.

Brock's last long holiday was more than 10 years ago, when he took a two-week drive across the country.

'Americans work like robots'

It's a totally different story in other parts of the world.

Nancy Schimkat, an American who lives in Weinheim, Germany, said her German husband, an engineer, gets six weeks of paid vacation a year, plus national holidays -- the norm. His company makes sure he takes all of it.

Gallery: Vacation by the numbers

The American vacation debate

Summer vacation for a bargain

It's typical for Germans to take off three consecutive weeks in August when "most of the country kind of closes down," Schimkat said. That's the time for big trips, perhaps to other parts of Europe, or to Australia or North America. Germans might also book a ski holiday in the winter and take a week off during Easter.

Schimkat's family back in the United States teases her that she's spoiled. But when she tells Germans that workers in the U.S. usually get two weeks of vacation a year, they cringe.

"They kind of have this idea that Americans work like robots and if that's the way they want to be, that's up to them. But they don't want to be like that," Schimkat said.

"[Germans] work very hard, but then they take their holiday and really relax. ... It's more than just making money for Germans, it's about having time for your family and it's about having time to wind down."

No legal obligation to offer vacation

So what's going on here?

A big reason for the difference is that paid time off is mandated by law in many parts of the world.

Germany is among more than two dozen industrialized countries -- from Australia to Slovenia to Japan -- that require employers to offer four weeks or more of paid vacation to their workers, according to a 2009 study by the human resources consulting company Mercer.

Finland, Brazil and France are the champs, guaranteeing six weeks of time off.

But employers in the United States are not obligated under federal law to offer any paid vacation, so about a quarter of all American workers don't have access to it, government figures show.

That makes the U.S. the only advanced nation in the world that doesn't guarantee its workers annual leave, according to a report titled "No-Vacation Nation" by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a liberal policy group.

Most U.S. companies, of course, do provide vacation as a way to attract and retain workers.

But the fear of layoffs and the ever-faster pace of work mean many Americans are reluctant to be absent from the office -- anxious that they might look like they're not committed to their job. Or they worry they won't be able to cope with the backlog of work waiting for them after a vacation.

Then, there's the way we work.

Working more makes Americans happier than Europeans, according to a study published recently in the Journal of Happiness Studies. That may be because Americans believe more than Europeans do that hard work is associated with success, wrote Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn, the study's author and an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Dallas.

"Americans maximize their... [happiness] by working, and Europeans maximize their [happiness] through leisure," he found.

So despite research documenting the health and productivity benefits of taking time off, a long vacation can be undesirable, scary, unrealistic or just plain impossible for many U.S. workers.

Little appetite for regulation

Critics say it's time for a change.

"There is simply no evidence that working people to death gives you a competitive advantage," said John de Graaf, the national coordinator for Take Back Your Time, a group that researches the effects of overwork.

He noted that the United States came in fourth in the World Economic Forum's 2010-2011 rankings of the most competitive economies, but Sweden -- a country that by law offers workers five weeks of paid vacation -- came in second.

De Graaf drafted the first version of the Paid Vacation Act of 2009, which would have required larger companies to provide at least one week of paid annual leave to employees. But the bill, introduced by then-Rep. Alan Grayson, D-Florida, in May of 2009, got little traction.

Opponents said that it would have a negative impact on business and that the government shouldn't get involved in the workplace in this way.

"You would have had the idea that we were calling for the end of Western civilization. Comments like, 'Oh, they're going to make America a 21st-century France,' as if we were all going to have to eat snails," de Graaf said.

"I'm in no way anti-capitalist, I think the market does a lot of good things, but the Europeans understand that the market also has its failings and that when simply left completely to its own devices, it doesn't produce these perfect results."

But is more government regulation the answer? The debate rages on.

Back in suburban Washington, Brock -- the software engineer who hasn't had a long vacation for more than 10 years -- is finally planning a real getaway. His 60th birthday is coming up in December, and he'd like to do something special, maybe go on a cruise to the Bahamas.

Will he be able to pull it off and get away from work? He's still not entirely sure, he said.

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  • nickknock
    I lived in the Europe for a several years, then came back to the USA.   I now can not wait to move back for good. Europeans live so much better then Americans. Europeans live better, eat better, and have a much higher quality of life.   America is no third world nation, but it not the half the count... more
    I lived in the Europe for a several years, then came back to the USA.   I now can not wait to move back for good. Europeans live so much better then Americans. Europeans live better, eat better, and have a much higher quality of life.   America is no third world nation, but it not the half the country it thinks it is. less
  • tompink
    My wife studies French and likes to travel to France.  From her reports, the French live a pretty good life and they don't have to worry about health care making them bankrupted.  American can't even manage to change to the metric system.
  • alexade
    Are you guys really convinced that "Europe" is so much better than the US? Maybe France is (don't know, never lived there) but all of it sure isn't. My husband and I have been back for a couple of years now after a decade of living in Italy (he's Italian) and haven't regretted it for a second. In It... more
    Are you guys really convinced that "Europe" is so much better than the US? Maybe France is (don't know, never lived there) but all of it sure isn't. My husband and I have been back for a couple of years now after a decade of living in Italy (he's Italian) and haven't regretted it for a second. In Italy he was an Engineer and his salary was equivalent to that of a McDonalds worker here. We could barely afford to get by month to month, and couldn't afford to have children (luckily, we could here in the US). Over 30% of people under 35 were unemployed, and doing NOTHING, for years on end. We don't like the cost of health care for those not offered health insurance by an employer, but also don't miss spending a good part of our vacation days running from doctors office to doctors office, waiting in lines, because you have no selection in the time and place of your appointment. The last year we were there, my husband had to take a week of vacation time trying to close a bank account, because of the huge amount of bureaucracy... 

    By the way, not all Americans have it so bad vacation wise. My husband has 4 weeks (and is required by his company to take all of them) and my father has 6 weeks. I agree that its ridiculous that some people only get 2 weeks and don't even use them, but if they are willing to stay in that situation, what can you say? There is better stuff out there if you look. By the way, in Italy I had NO paid vacation time. There it is required by law ONLY if you have a special type of contract, which used to be the norm, and now is impossible to get. 

    I hope Europe is better to you guys than it was to us, but don't go thinking it's utopia... less

  • hehe101
    despite that, the US has more freedom than other countries, and has survived as a democratic republic longer than any other country, vacation or not.
  • tyranny0000
    hehe101 - I don't know what "freedoms" Americans have that Europeans don't, but if knowing that the United States has survived for more than 200 years means more to you than spending time with your family, that works for you.

    It doesn't necessarily make everyone happy.

  • JMissal
    That must be why the Euro is failing.  They are playing rather than working.On the other hand, our dollar is failing because of excessive government spending (borrowing and printing money - inflation) so that those who don't work in this nation can still get their entitlements.Two sides of the same ... more
    That must be why the Euro is failing.  They are playing rather than working.

    On the other hand, our dollar is failing because of excessive government spending (borrowing and printing money - inflation) so that those who don't work in this nation can still get their entitlements.

    Two sides of the same socialist coin....which isn't supported by gold. less

  • biggermouth
    nickknock -  thats fine if you think that way.  When you leave can you please take time and convince the illegals in this country to move with you.
  • TaxNut
    USA has become "No Wonderland". Where ever you go...Airport, Hotels, Resturants, Transportation, Sight Seeing, Car Rental, Taxes, then dealing with PEOPLE, etc, etc.. has become very very expensive, nasty and everyone in the "chain"try to rip you off" as much as they can. It is NOT what use to be...... more
    USA has become "No Wonderland". Where ever you go...Airport, Hotels, Resturants, Transportation, Sight Seeing, Car Rental, Taxes, then dealing with PEOPLE, etc, etc.. has become very very expensive, nasty and everyone in the "chain"try to rip you off" as much as they can. It is NOT what use to be...like in early 60's and 70's. less
  • Nateo
    hehe101 - You sure about that? I was able to sign up for the military here at 17 but had to wait until 21 to legally buy a beer. In most European countries you can do this at 18 or earlier. You can also carry your beer with you down the street to your friends house or have one on the beach without g... more
    hehe101 - You sure about that? I was able to sign up for the military here at 17 but had to wait until 21 to legally buy a beer. In most European countries you can do this at 18 or earlier. You can also carry your beer with you down the street to your friends house or have one on the beach without getting into trouble. Try that here and you will be ticketed and fined. You can also board a plane in Europe without being selected for "random screening" and having your junk patted. These are just a few examples. America is great, don't get me wrong, but we don't have as many liberties as many of us believe. less
  • Nateo
    JMissal - Yet the Euro (and the Pound for that matter) is still kicking the Dollar's a** in terms of purchasing power and has been for years. Hell, the Canadian dollar is basically on par with ours now.
  • ChitownJason
    @ Nateo - they can also use their own money to play poker on the Internet...
  • goodyweaver
    It's comical that anyone would believe they have more "freedom" in the US than in Europe.  European nations have FAR more personal freedoms than the US, and a higher average standard of living.  I don't know what americans believe they are free to DO, exactly, that Europeans aren't, besides have the... more
    It's comical that anyone would believe they have more "freedom" in the US than in Europe.  European nations have FAR more personal freedoms than the US, and a higher average standard of living.  I don't know what americans believe they are free to DO, exactly, that Europeans aren't, besides have the freedom to pay for health care.  What other freedoms do you have?  Can you smoke a little weed?  No?  Can you move freely in cities without being videotaped?  Are you free from government domain over your home?  What about free to choose which gender you will marry?  Freedom of information regarding whether GMO's are in the food you're buying?  Free to sell raw milk across state lines?  Freedom from illegal police harassment (Indiana just ruled that police can illegally enter your home and you can't do anything about it, in case you're wondering)?  Huh?  Free to refuse taxation for policies you don't believe in - like tossing trillions into the toilet of war while NOT providing health care and a strong safety net like EVERY OTHER INDUSTRIALIZED NATION IN THE WORLD???

    It is VERRRRRY interesting that the only "freedoms" you people seem to have that Europeans don't are the freedom of corporations to rob you of leisure time, withhold product information from you, lock you up in private prisons for smoking a plant, and the "right" to die from lack of medical treatment.  Let's think about this, also - DO YOU EVEN HAVE THE ACTUAL FREEDOM TO VOTE WITHIN AN ELECTION SYSTEM THAT ISN'T RIGGED TO ELECT THE WEALTHY RULING ELITE??? 

    Oh, wait.  Guns.  You have guns.  Hmmm...  Oh, dear.  Unfortunately, guns ARE allowed in most of Europe too - contrary to what you people might think. 

    So where, prey tell, are your precious freedoms?  It appears that the US gives a lot of lip service to the word "freedom" while not really providing many that you couldn't get somewhere else.  And here's a newsflash - better worker rights, more leisure time, and stronger local communities actually make life BETTER for normal human beings.  The fact that in your country 2% of the population can get wealthier than anywhere else in the world doesn't equal "freedom" - it just equals extreme inequity.  And you can find that in Bangladesh if you want it. less

  • jmb72
    Most of my European co-workers think Americans are crazy.  We work ourselves to death to have a big house on a small lot that requires us to drive 30+ miles one way to our jobs.  We leave before the sun comes up to avoid the traffic and are lucky to get home before the kids go to bed.  Europeans (Du... more
    Most of my European co-workers think Americans are crazy.  We work ourselves to death to have a big house on a small lot that requires us to drive 30+ miles one way to our jobs.  We leave before the sun comes up to avoid the traffic and are lucky to get home before the kids go to bed.  Europeans (Dutch, English, and Spanish in my experience) work hard when they are at work but they work to live, not live to work. less
  • XSmartHuman
    I had a cup of tea in Paris and it cost me $7.50 ($USD.)
  • KillerMike
    America does have legitimate freedom of speech, Europe has a "censored" version that involves hypersensitivity to every minority group that crosses their paths. We also have the best modern entertainment. I'd say those are pretty good reasons to live here.
  • Gethetruth
    You are right, US is overrated. The American Dream has always been the American Nightmare, but fools can be made to believe anything by the Corporate Pigs.
  • 987None
    But as global competition increases expect many people around the world to be working longer. There are more people getting education and jobs. Companies and all know that technology is good for them because if a person is on vacation it is possible for that person to get a phone call or need to be ... more
    But as global competition increases expect many people around the world to be working longer. There are more people getting education and jobs. Companies and all know that technology is good for them because if a person is on vacation it is possible for that person to get a phone call or need to be online in order to respond back. Phones, laptops, and such make it possible for people to work longer and work while on vacation too. less
  • tyranny0000
    "Working more makes Americans happier than Europeans?"  Maybe for those on Wall Street who get government bail outs.Do a survey and see how Americans' last words were "I should have spent more time at work."Face it Americans, corproations and firms own you, and your government is helping them tighte... more
    "Working more makes Americans happier than Europeans?"  Maybe for those on Wall Street who get government bail outs.

    Do a survey and see how Americans' last words were "I should have spent more time at work."

    Face it Americans, corproations and firms own you, and your government is helping them tighten their grip. less

  • RaginAzn
    yes, we do own you.  we also know there's nothing the majority of laborer's WILL NOT DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT!
  • Kam2010
    Americans believe that "working hard" gives success but it doesn't. Working smart does.
  • reasonrules
    I've worked as an engineer for 15 years and most companies simply don't care: they don't are about their clients, or their employees, or their products.   The only thing they care about is cash flow.  They will work you until you drop and then replace you because there's always someone out there who... more
    I've worked as an engineer for 15 years and most companies simply don't care: they don't are about their clients, or their employees, or their products.   The only thing they care about is cash flow.  They will work you until you drop and then replace you because there's always someone out there who will take your job.  They acknowledge there is a cost of re-training but they shrug it off.  The practice is grossly inefficient, ignores the long term and hurts our economy.  Why can Germany, with their demonic socialism and six weeks vacation, continue to manufacture products?  Because they use their sophistication to build higher quality and efficiency. less
  • NSIndiana
    That's the American mindset in general.
  • counterviews
    I too am an engineer, 30+ years now.  The major aerospace company I work at has a horrendous turnover rate and they could care less; resulting in zero continuity in the workforce.  At McDonald's you can put anybody behind the counter and get a hamburger, not a great hamburger, just OK.  At this well... more
    I too am an engineer, 30+ years now.  The major aerospace company I work at has a horrendous turnover rate and they could care less; resulting in zero continuity in the workforce.  At McDonald's you can put anybody behind the counter and get a hamburger, not a great hamburger, just OK.  At this well recognized aerospace company you can put anybody behind a computer and get a design , not a great design, not even a good design, but A design.  Mission accomplished in their eyes, I guess. less
  • NocommentCNN
    I have seen what happens to those who think they can take a vacation from work. Over the last twenty years those who take vacation of more than a day at a time soon find out that, if they company can live without you for two weeks they can live without you forever. Twenty four years ago there was ov... more
    I have seen what happens to those who think they can take a vacation from work. Over the last twenty years those who take vacation of more than a day at a time soon find out that, if they company can live without you for two weeks they can live without you forever. 
    Twenty four years ago there was over 4000 people working at our manufacturing plant, today we have 168 with 82 executives. All those jobs are now in China, India and Mexico, they have no vacation in those locations. 
    Only executives can take vacation. The rest of us need our jobs more than we need to see yellow stone park. Vacation are just another lie only the privileged get vacations, just like retirement no one really can retire any more. less
  • jimml
    I'm betting most of your executives also spend 15-30 hours a week working when on "vacation" too.
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