How work is killing the family
- Matt Wade
- March 6, 2007
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Work killing family
Australia has emerged as one of the most intensely work focused countries, but it is creating a human tragedy. Research has found a strong link between long and unpredictable work hours and the breakdown of family and other relationships.
Australia is the only high-income country in the world that combines very long average working hours with a high level of work at unsocial times - during weeknights and weekends - and a significant proportion of casual employment.
These work patterns are making employees unhealthy, putting relationships under extreme stress, creating angry, inconsistent parents, and reducing the well-being of children, says the report by Relationships Forum Australia, titled An unexpected tragedy.
"These associations are evident when either or both parents work atypical schedules, so the timing of fathers', not just mothers', work matters to children," it says.
"Although low-income members of Australian society are generally more keenly affected by these changes, the impact is shared across all strata in our community."
More than 20 per cent of employees work 50 hours or more each week, and more than 30 per cent regularly work on weekends. When these measures of long work hours and weekend work are combined, Australia ranks as the most work-intense high income country. About 2 million people now lose at least six hours of family time to work on Sunday, and those hours are not fully compensated for during the week.
The trends in working patterns suggest worse is to come, says the report, which draws together a large body of Australian and international research on work and family.
"The cold statistics hide immense human tragedy," the report concludes.
The struggle for many families to balance the demands of work and family has emerged as hot political issue in many marginal seats. A cluster of work-related issues, including the Government's industrial relations changes and the cost and availability of child care, are set to feature in the federal election. However, the report's co-author, Paul Shepanski, a former partner of Boston Consulting Group, said the work patterns that are causing widespread damage to relationships and families have emerged slowly over 30 years. Continued...
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