Fewer Romanians work from home than anywhere else in the EU

01 May 2018

Romania has the lowest percentage of work from home employees in 2017, according to a recent Eurostat study released for Labour Day. Only 0.3% of Romanian employees usually work from home, the survey found. It was lower than in 2016, when the percentage stood at 0.4%. The result is slightly better when looking at the female employee group, with a 0.5% work from home ratio.

Luxembourg is at the other end of the scale, with 9% of its employees usually working from home. The Netherlands, Finland and Denmark come next in the ranking, with 8.5%, 8.4% and 6.2%, respectively. The survey looked at the 15 to 74 age group, made of employees who usually work from home. Romania is also last for the number of self – employed persons who worked from home, with 0.8%. Meanwhile, the Netherlands has 45.3% self-employed persons working from home. It is followed by Finland, Luxembourg and Denmark. With 1.5 million self-employed persons and a total of 8.6 million employed persons, Romania ranks rather high for their number: 7th place. Italy had 4.9 million self-employed, followed by UK: 4.7 million, Germany – 4 million, France and Spain, with 3 million self-employed each, and Poland, with 2.9 million self-employed people.

Romania comes last for the share of temp workers, with 1%, while the biggest percentage in the EU was of 27% in Spain. Meanwhile, 7.3% of Romanian employees worked occasionally at night, which came in the middle of the scale. Croatia had the highest ratio of night workers, with 15.5%. Italy had the lowest rate of occasional night workers, with 3%.

Some 1.8% of Romanian workers worked long hours in 2017 – 49 hours or more per week. The lowest result, reflecting a low number of overtime workers, was in the Netherlands, with 0.3%. British citizen reported the biggest ratio of overtime workers: 12.3%. UK was followed by Cyprus, with 10.6% of employees who work long hours. More in the Eurostat release.

editor@romania-insider.com

Comments
Read more...

Fewer Romanians work from home than anywhere else in the EU

01 May 2018

Romania has the lowest percentage of work from home employees in 2017, according to a recent Eurostat study released for Labour Day. Only 0.3% of Romanian employees usually work from home, the survey found. It was lower than in 2016, when the percentage stood at 0.4%. The result is slightly better when looking at the female employee group, with a 0.5% work from home ratio.

Luxembourg is at the other end of the scale, with 9% of its employees usually working from home. The Netherlands, Finland and Denmark come next in the ranking, with 8.5%, 8.4% and 6.2%, respectively. The survey looked at the 15 to 74 age group, made of employees who usually work from home. Romania is also last for the number of self – employed persons who worked from home, with 0.8%. Meanwhile, the Netherlands has 45.3% self-employed persons working from home. It is followed by Finland, Luxembourg and Denmark. With 1.5 million self-employed persons and a total of 8.6 million employed persons, Romania ranks rather high for their number: 7th place. Italy had 4.9 million self-employed, followed by UK: 4.7 million, Germany – 4 million, France and Spain, with 3 million self-employed each, and Poland, with 2.9 million self-employed people.

Romania comes last for the share of temp workers, with 1%, while the biggest percentage in the EU was of 27% in Spain. Meanwhile, 7.3% of Romanian employees worked occasionally at night, which came in the middle of the scale. Croatia had the highest ratio of night workers, with 15.5%. Italy had the lowest rate of occasional night workers, with 3%.

Some 1.8% of Romanian workers worked long hours in 2017 – 49 hours or more per week. The lowest result, reflecting a low number of overtime workers, was in the Netherlands, with 0.3%. British citizen reported the biggest ratio of overtime workers: 12.3%. UK was followed by Cyprus, with 10.6% of employees who work long hours. More in the Eurostat release.

editor@romania-insider.com

Comments
Read more...

Romania Insider Free Newsletter