banner unionsafete

UK Workers High Stress Levels Continue As £27 Billion Is Given In Unpaid Overtime

Over five million workers across the UK gave away £27.4 billion in unpaid overtime in 2009, a TUC analysis of official statistics reveaed earlier this month.

The TUC study shows that 5.07 million people regularly worked unpaid overtime in 2009, a decline of 168,000 since 2008.

Staff who did unpaid overtime worked an average of 7 hours 12 minutes a week, worth £5,402 a year - the highest amount since records began in the late 1990s - and an increase of £263 since 2008.

The biggest rises in the value of unpaid overtime have taken place in London (+£498), the North West (+£492) and the North East (+£474). Wales is the only area in which the value of unpaid overtime fell (-£392).

Of the five million employees who worked unpaid overtime, nearly 900,000 regularly worked more than ten hours a week for free. Workers in Northern Ireland (23.1 per cent of those who worked unpaid overtime), the East Midlands (21.3 per cent) and London (20.6 per cent) were the most likely to do more than ten hours of unpaid overtime a week.
With many employers and staff agreeing to reduce hours in order to avoid job losses, the reduction in working time has had a knock on effect on the number of people working paid and unpaid overtime, the TUC says.

If everyone who worked unpaid overtime did it from the start of the year, they would start getting paid on Friday 26 February. The TUC has declared this day Work Your Proper Hours Day and will call on bosses to thank staff for the extra work they are putting in to help businesses through the recession.

TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: 'The recession has forced many employees to do less hours in an effort to save jobs and this has also had an effect on the amount of unpaid overtime worked.

" 'This flexibility and the sacrifices made by staff has saved jobs and kept companies afloat. Bosses should use Work Your Proper Hours Day to thank staff for the extra effort they are putting in to help their business through the recession. But millions of people are still working far too many hours and often they are not even being paid for it. This long hours culture causes stress and damages people's health. 'Most employers are understandably focused on fighting their way through the recession. But they shouldn't forget that working cultures such as pointless presenteeism - which keeps people at their desks for no good reason - is not just bad for staff but bad for business too."

Source: TUC



Designed, Hosted and Maintained by Union Safety Services