Economy
Parliament wants to ensure the right to disconnect from work
Parliament wants to protect employees’ fundamental right to disconnect from work and not to be reachable outside working hours.
Digital tools have increased efficiency and flexibility for employers and employees but also created a constantly on-call culture, with employees being easily reachable anytime and anywhere, including outside working hours. Technology has made teleworking possible, while the Covid-19 pandemic and the lockdowns have made it widespread. 37% of workers in the EU started working from home during a lockdown.
Teleworking blurs the distinction between private and professional
Although teleworking has saved jobs and enabled many businesses to survive the corona crisis, it has also blurred the distinction between work and private life. Many people are having to work outside their regular working hours, worsening their work-life balance. 27% of people who work from home worked outside working hours.
People who regularly telework are more than twice as likely to work more than the maximum working hours set down in the EU's working time directive than those who don’t.
Maximum working and minimum rest times:
- Maximum 48 working hours per week
- Minimum 11 consecutive hours of daily rest
- At least four weeks paid annual leave per year
Find out what the EU is doing to protect jobs affected by the pandemic.
Find out more about EU rules on work-life balance.
Constant connectivity can lead to health issues
Rest is essential for people's well-being and constant connectivity to work has consequences on health. Sitting too long in front of the screen and working too much reduces concentration, causes cognitive and emotional overload and can lead to headaches, eye strain, fatigue, sleep deprivation, anxiety or burnout. In addition, a static posture and repetitive movements can cause muscle strain and musculoskeletal disorders, especially in working environments that don’t meet ergonomic standards.
Parliament calls for new EU law
The right to disconnect is not defined in EU law. Parliament wants to change that. On 21 January 2021 it called on the Commission to come up with a law allowing employees to disconnect from work during non-work hours without consequences and setting minimum standards for remote work.
Parliament noted that interruptions to non-working time and the extension of working hours can increase the risk of unremunerated overtime, can have a negative impact on health, work-life balance and rest from work; and called for the following measures:
- Employers should not require workers to be available outside their working time and co-workers should refrain from contacting colleagues for work purposes.
- EU countries should ensure that workers who invoke their right to disconnect are protected from victimisation and other repercussions and that there are mechanisms in place to deal with complaints or breaches of the right to disconnect.
- Remote professional learning and training activities must be counted as work activities and must not take place during overtime or days off without adequate compensation.
Find out more on how the EU improves workers’ rights and working conditions.
Find out more
- Adopted resolution
- Right to disconnect;: at a glance (January 2021)
- Briefing (July 2020)
- Social Europe: what Parliament is doing on social policy
- European Solidarity Corps: opportunities for young people
- Youth employment: the EU measures to make it work
- MEPs approve new, more inclusive Erasmus+ programme
- European Globalisation Adjustment Fund: helping redundant workers
- European Social Fund: fighting poverty and unemployment
- How the EU improves workers’ rights and working conditions
- Improving public health: EU measures explained
- The future of Erasmus+: more opportunities
- What solutions to population decline in Europe’s regions?
- A new ambitious EU Disability Strategy for 2021-2030
- Social Climate Fund: Parliament’s ideas for a just energy transition
- Social security coordination: new rules for more flexibility and clarity
- Posted workers: the facts on the reform (infographic)
- Posting of workers: final vote on equal pay and working conditions
- Gig economy: EU law to improve workers’ rights (infographic)
- Better working conditions for all: balancing flexibility and security
- Reducing unemployment: EU policies explained
- The Parliament’s fight for gender equality in the EU
- Globalisation's impact on employment and the EU
- Covid-19's economic impact: €100 billion to keep people in jobs
- Better working conditions for truck drivers across the EU
- Covid-19: how the EU fights youth unemployment
- Final vote on European Solidarity Corps
- Parliament wants to ensure the right to disconnect from work
- How MEPS want to tackle in-work poverty in the EU
- Fair minimum wages: action for decent living conditions in the EU
- Parents’ work-life balance: new leave rules for family care
- Parliament calls for measures to combat sexual harassment in Europe
- Female genital mutilation: where, why and consequences
- Understanding the gender pay gap: definition and causes
- How the EU is tackling gender-based violence
- Getting back to work after a long sickness or injury (video)
- Drinking water in the EU: better quality and access
- Accessibility: making products and services in the EU easier to use
- Disaster management: boosting the EU's emergency response
- Health threats: boosting EU readiness and crisis management
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