Germans refer to “Close of Business” as Feierabend,
which literally translated means something like party
night. Now some in Germany want to impose a work
communications blackout during this sacred time.
Germany already mandates a host of labor policies,
including a minimum of 24 paid vacation days plus holidays and 14 weeks of paid
maternity leave.
The recently proposed
no-work-communications-after-hours regulation would forbid employers from
contacting their employees via email or phone call past their scheduled working
hours.
Hanns Pauli, health and safety expert for the
Federation of German Trade Unions, suggested that contacting workers after
hours “crosses a sacrosanct line in Germany between work and leisure,”
according to NPR. German Labor Minister Andrea Nahles is reportedly calling for
an “anti-stress regulation.”
As is so often the case, nanny state policies like
this one being considered in Germany, end up hurting workers the most, in
contrast to the policies’ stated intentions.
In the same way that the Obamacare employer mandate
is hurting Americans’ full-time
employment prospects, mandated benefits are pushing many
Germans to accept part-time, or contract work—because companies are less likely
to hire full-time permanent employees, due to the amount of regulations.
Between 2000 and 2010, the number of Germans in part-time employment rose
by 43
percent. Among men, the number doubled during this period.
A no-work-communications-after-hours policy could
harm parents in particular. Rigid, inflexible work policies are exactly the
wrong medicine for improving work-life balance.
Many parents value being able
to leave the office some afternoons to see their kid’s soccer game and don’t
mind making up for lost work time after dinner, for example. Such arrangements
would get harder to come by.
Moreover, it is unclear that a sizable portion of
employees are bothered by email after hours.
According to polling by
the German health insurance carrier DAK, a mere 4 percent of employees strongly
object to reading their work email after hours and on the weekend. Many find it
helpful to be able to combine leisure time and work thanks to electronic communication
devices.
Nevertheless, some companies have chosen to literally pull the plug,
like Volkswagen which turns
off its email servers after hours.
Instead of a misguided one-size-fits-all solution to
what seems at this point to be a largely imagined problem, the best policy is
one arrived at by mutual consent between employers and their employees.
The
good news is that Angela Merkel has shown little
interest in burdening the German
economy with even more labor regulations.

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