Overtime, Compensation, Health and Work-Life Balance
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18753/2297-8224-168Keywords:
working time, overtime, working time accounts, well-being, over-employmentAbstract
Overtime is widely spread in Germany. Representative data from 7.765 respondents from the BAuA-Working Time Survey 2017 show that employees work an average of 3.9 hours per week longer than contractually agreed, with differences according to gender, full-time work, qualification levels and occupations. More than half of these are transitory overtime hours, which are compensated by free time. A quarter is paid and every fifth hour of overtime is not compensated. Regression analyses point towards negative relationships with health and work-life balance. This applies to transitory overtime hours as well as for overtime hours without compensatory time off, full time and part time employees, and controlled for age, gender, qualification level, occupations, and contractual working hours. Stratified analyses show some different patterns for employees in night and shift work and for those with mainly private reasons for overtime work.Downloads
Article
Issue 3/2020
Section
Thematic Section
Number
Article3.5
Language
Deutsch
Published
2020-12-15
License
Copyright (c) 2020 Corinna Brauner, Anne Marit Wöhrmann, Nils Backhaus, Anita Tisch


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.