
Coalition Clash in Berlin as Global Working Time Reforms Gather Pace
From Germany's coalition row over flexible hours to Latin America's statutory reductions and Sweden's debate on sick pay, a global renegotiation of the working week is reshaping political alliances.
A draft law from Germany's labour ministry has ignited a bitter coalition dispute, exposing deep rifts over the future of the eight-hour day. The proposal, attributed to Social Democrat minister Bärbel Bas, would permit weekly rather than daily maximum working hours only for employees covered by collective bargaining agreements — roughly half the workforce — and even then only if firms adopt additional health safeguards and electronic time recording. Employer federations reacted with fury, calling the text a collection of union maximal demands that contradicts the coalition treaty's promise of flexible, family-friendly working time. The Christian Democrats' general secretary declared it no basis for further government work, while Bavaria's premier issued a blunt veto. Bas herself has previously said she would prefer not to touch the subject at all, and the draft appears designed to preserve as much of the traditional day limit as possible.
Across Latin America, the direction of travel is markedly different. Colombia will on 15 July complete a phased reduction of the statutory working week from 48 to 42 hours, a shift driven by evidence that the country combined the OECD's longest hours with its lowest productivity. The change raises hourly pay rates and forces companies to redesign shift patterns, while a separate labour reform increases Sunday premia. Mexico, meanwhile, is advancing a plan to cut the week to 40 hours by 2027, coupled with a 13% minimum wage rise and new restrictions on overtime. Viewed from Bogotá and Mexico City, these reforms are framed not as radical left projects but as moderate, centre-left measures catching up with social protections achieved in Europe generations ago — a narrative that has helped progressive forces consolidate electoral support in Colombia.
In Sweden, the debate centres less on daily limits than on the cost of sickness absence. The Social Democrats' leader dismissed as “made-up figures” employer estimates that abolishing the waiting-day deduction would add nearly 15 billion kronor to direct sick-pay costs, with behavioural effects potentially adding billions more. Yet those calculations originate in the government's own departmental memorandum, which also warns of lost productivity and GDP. The rhetorical dismissal, observers in Stockholm note, reflects a broader deterioration of political discourse, where inconvenient arithmetic is labelled partisan rather than debated on its merits. Meanwhile, the Liberal party has sought to reposition itself around core public services and security, while centre-right cooperation with the Sweden Democrats continues to strain old alliances, prompting calls for a new centrist coalition.
Taken together, these national debates reveal a common thread: the post-pandemic renegotiation of the boundary between work and rest is forcing political families to define what they mean by flexibility and protection. In Berlin, the fight is over who controls the distribution of hours; in Latin America, the state is mandating shorter weeks outright; in Stockholm, the argument is about who bears the cost of illness. Analysts in London note that while the direction of reform varies, each case tests the same underlying question — whether reducing or reordering working time can boost well-being without undermining competitiveness. The German coalition's ability to resolve its impasse will be an early indicator of how far Europe's largest economy is willing to adapt its labour market rules, just as emerging economies press ahead with statutory cuts that would have been unthinkable a decade ago.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
The short-week debate in continental Europe is marked by sharp political conflict and employer resistance. Proposals to reduce working hours are portrayed as costly and ideological, while unions and the left insist on worker protections. Germany's coalition is at risk of splitting over the eight-hour day limit, with conservatives accusing the labour ministry of tightening rules instead of making them more flexible.
In Latin America, the reduction of working hours is celebrated as a historic and progressive achievement. Colombia completes the shift to a 42-hour week, leaving behind its negative top ranking in OECD lists. In Mexico, the government orders the elimination of overtime and prepares the 40-hour week, hailed as the most important reform in a century.
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