Sep 6, 2008 

Outside the Beltway: ‘New’ Europe Outworks ‘Old’ - James Joyner

For the complete report from the Outside the Beltway click on this link

In a study published Wednesday by Dublin-based EU think tank Eurofound, official and reported work hours were compared across the EU. Europe’s hardest workers, at least in terms of hours spent on the job? Full-time workers in Romania and Bulgaria, the EU’s newest members, put in 41.7 hours a week. Germany ranked 6th, with workers reporting 41.1 hours a week spent at work. The report, which analyzed statistical data from all of the EU member countries, found that the 15 pre-2004 members of the EU spend an average of 39. 5 hours a week on the job, while people in the 12 new member states work 40.6 hours on average. Of the top 10 countries, seven — Bulgaria, Romania, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia and Hungary — joined the EU after 2004.

Vacation time also varies dramatically from country to country. Swedes have a generous 33 days per year of paid vacation, while Estonians get just 20. Germans rank high here, too — third on Eurofound’s list, with 30 days per year.

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Apr 3, 2007 

ElectricNews.net:ICT is lynchpin of Europe's economy - by Emmet Ryan

For the complete report from ElectricNews.net click on this link

ICT is lynchpin of Europe's economy - by Emmet Ryan

The Commission's annual progress report on i2010, the EU's digitally led strategy for growth and jobs, said ICT contributed nearly 50 percent of productivity growth across the European Union between 2000 and 2004. "Our integrated European policy for growth and jobs is now starting to pay dividends," said Viviane Reding, EU Commissioner for Information Society and Media. "However, let's not be complacent. ICT companies in Europe are still not able to profit from economies of scale in view of regulatory fragmentation that blocks the emergence of pan-European services and hurts the chances of e-communication operators and software companies to compete on the world market. The EU and its Member States need in particular to make a greater effort to remove the remaining impediments within the internal market for online services."

In the study, which is the second annual report on i2010, Ireland topped the EU rankings in several ICT categories. Ireland was given the top ranking in the EU 25 for ICT sector share of total GDP, ICT sector share of total employment and ICT sector growth.

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