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Overtime
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Overtime
 

Information About

Overtime




Overtime is the amount of time someone works beyond ''normal working hours''. Normal hours may be determined in several ways:
  • by custom (what is considered healthy or reasonable by society),

  • by practices of a given trade or profession,

  • by legislation,

  • by agreement between employers and workers or their representatives.


Most nations have overtime Laws designed to dissuade or prevent employers from forcing their employees to work excessively long hours. These laws may take into account other considerations than the humanitarian, such as increasing the overall level of employment in the economy. One common approach to regulating overtime is to require employers to pay workers at a higher hourly rate for overtime work. Companies may choose to pay workers higher overtime pay even if not obliged to do so by law, particularly if they believe that they face a Backward Bending Supply Curve Of Labour .

Overtime pay rates can cause workers to work longer hours than they would at a flat hourly rate. Overtime laws, attitudes to overtime and Hours Of Work vary greatly from country to country and between different economic sectors.


UNITED STATES FEDERAL LAW

In the United States , the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 establishes a standard Work Week of 40 hours for certain kinds of workers, and mandates payment for overtime hours to those workers of one and one-half times the worker's normal rate of pay for any time worked above 40 hours. The law creates two broad categories of workers, those that are "exempt" from the regulation and those that are "non-exempt". Classes of workers that are exempt from the regulation include certain types of administrative, professional, and managerial employees. Under the law, employers are not required to pay exempt employees overtime but must do so for non-exempt employees. Out of approximately 120 million American workers, nearly 50 million are exempt from overtime laws (''U.S Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division'', 1998). In 2004, the United States was 7th out of 24 OECD countries ranked by number of annual working hours per worker. (See Working Time for a complete listing.)

On to their workers in lieu of overtime. In September 2004 , both Republican-controlled chambers of Congress voted to block the Labor Department from putting the regulatory changes into effect.


EUROPEAN COMMUNITY (EC) DIRECTIVES

Directives issued by the EC must be incorporated into law by member states.

Directives 93/104/EC (1993), 2000/34/EC (2000), which limited working hours, were consolidated into 2003/88/EC (2003). Employers and employees could agree to opt out, but this exception is to be tightened up, after the EC reported evidence that the opt-out was being abused in the UK , in a new proposal for a directive expected to be adopted in early 2006, and adopted into the law of member states within 2 years.


The Directives require:
  • maximum average working week (including overtime) of 48 hours

  • minimum daily rest period of 11 consecutive hours in every 24

  • breaks when the working day exceeds 6 hours

  • minimum weekly rest period of 24 hours plus the 11 hours daily rest period in every 7-day period

  • minimum of 4 weeks paid annual leave

  • night work restricted to an average of 8 hours in any 24-hour period


The Directives apply to:
  • all sectors of activity, both public and private

  • Doctors in training will work a maximum week of 58 hours until 2009. From 1 August 2009 their maximum working week falls to 48 hours.


Exemptions:
  • Member States of the EC may exempt: managing executives or other persons with autonomous decision-making power; family workers; and workers officiating at religious ceremonies. These are workers whose working time is not measured and/or pre-determined or can be determined by the workers.

  • Other categories can be exempted from the directive's key provisions provided compensatory rest or appropriate protection is granted. These include employees who work a long way from home, or whose activities require a permanent presence or continuity of service or production, or who work in sectors which have peaks of activity. Examples include off-shore workers, security guards, journalists, emergency workers, agricultural workers, tour guides, etc.


The conditions attached to the worker's individual consent are tightened by the proposed new Directive:
member states may allow workers to opt out from the limitation of hours worked so long as this is expressly allowed under a collective agreement (e.g., with a Trades Union ), ''and '' if the individual worker consents. The individual's consent is subject to conditions:
  • It cannot be given at the same time as the contract of employment is signed or during any probation period

  • It has to be given in writing

  • It is valid for a maximum of one year (renewable)

  • No worker can work more than 65 hours in any week

  • Employers are obliged to keep records of the number of hours actually worked and to make those records available to the responsible authorities if required.



REFERENCES

  • U.S Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, ''Minimum Wage and Overtime Hours Under the Fair Labor Standards Atc: 1998 Report to the Congress Required by Section 4(d)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act'', tab. 2 at 14 (1998).

  • Questions and Answers about working time (European Union)