Besides out of control big government...perhaps this is a reason why the US is going down the tubes.....
By Steve Hargreaves | CNNMoney.com – 7 hours ago
It's a common complaint: You feel like you're working constantly, and there's never enough time to enjoy life.
But as a whole, Americans are working far less now than they did a generation ago, and have more leisure time than ever.
The average work week has gone from over 38 hours in 1964 to under 34
hours in 2013 -- a drop of nearly 12%, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
A big reason for the decline is the growth in part-time jobs, which
have surged as more woman entered the workforce and the number of
restaurants, shopping malls, and other establishments that employ
part-time workers have exploded.
Another explanation is that people tend to stay in school longer and
retire earlier, clocking fewer hours over their lifetime. Men in their
50s, for example, have been retiring or entering semi-retirement earlier
and in greater numbers than those in previous generations, according to
John Robinson, a sociology professor at the University of Maryland, and
are partly responsible for driving down overall work hours per week.
And we're working a lot less than our grandparents, great
grandparents and earlier generations. The average work week for a
manufacturing employee in the 1860s was 62 hours, according to a paper
from Robert Whaples, an economist at Wake Forest University.
In the 1600s, there were actually laws requiring a minimum work day,
wrote Whaples. In parts of the country, most people had to work sun up
to sundown -- part of the Puritanical
"idle-hands-are-the-devil's-workshop" ethos.
Related: 10 hardest working countries
It wasn't easy to change that culture. Political battles that led to
less religious influence over the nation's laws almost sparked a civil
war. A century later, labor activists fought for decades to get the 40
hour work week.
Coinciding with the shorter work week
is a rise in leisure time. Americans reported having just under 35
hours a week of "free time" in 1965 -- that's time not spent at work,
doing housework, eating, sleeping or doing other activities necessary
for day-to-day survival, according to research by Robinson, who directs
the American's Use of Time Project at the University of Maryland.
By 2012, it had reached 42, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
"People feel less rushed than they did even a decade ago," said Robinson.
And thanks to modern technology, the time we spend on housework and cooking is declining.
Just what are we doing with all these extra hours? Watching more TV, mostly.
Related: World's shortest work weeks
But technology certainly hasn't made all our lives easier.
Some people, especially those at the higher end of the earnings
spectrum, report working more hours than they want to. This is
particularly true for professionals who are now tied to their work by
smartphones and email.
Also, many Americans are working part time not because they want to,
but because their jobs have been replaced by automation, outsourced, or
otherwise eliminated.
"The promise of technology is that we'd all get to work less," said
Linda Barrington, head of the Institute for Compensation Studies at
Cornell University's school of Industrial and Labor Relations. "But it's
playing out differently for different people at different income
levels."
Barrington believes the Affordable Care Act - a.k.a. Obamacare
-- is the first real law intended to deal with some of the disruption
of a changing workplace, as more Americans enter freelance or part-time
positions that don't provide health insurance.
As happened during the industrial revolution, she feels other
measures will need to take shape to make the technological revolution
more beneficial to all workers.
"How are we going to change the rules again?" she asked.
I have always looked upon my experiences here in Ecuador as nothing short of an adventure.....a "re-conquest". You will find that this Blog not only offers information on how to live, invest or simply visit Ecuador (rated the number one retirement heaven by International Living magazine for 2011) but also informative information and articles on how to survive in this fast changing and volatile World we live in. Your comments are welcome! colonialquito@yahoo.com
El Conquistqdor Francisco de Orellana
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