The European laws are not some random thing we made up because we are lazy. It is to ensure workers are well rested and ready for a new working year. Hence in long term it will also benefit employers.
Some personal anecdata: I notice an immediate difference when I come back after a long vacation. The first 2-3 months I work at top efficiency, get probably done twice as much as I would do any other month.
In the case of the UK, much of the working hours, weekends, time off for bank holidays etc were hard-won agreements and rights from the Industrial Revolution era to the 20th century. The UK led the charge with many of these things too
I wish more people understood this. We had basically slave labour, workhouses, horrific factories etc
Maybe is not as bad as you think?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_companies_by_r...
Do you have sources on that?
My anecdotal experience is that I need at least 3 weeks.
https://www.rechtsindex.de/arbeitsrecht/490-jahresurlaub-mus...
I know this to be true in Switzerland, and only in banking. Where it has to do with detecting fraud in your absence.
If that was true Europe would have the highest productivity of the world, but it doesn't.
Maybe productivity should not be the metric we should strive for?
I lived/worked in the US and Europe and my quality of life and overall happiness was way higher in Europe even if my salary was higher in the US.
Depends on how you measure productivity. Per hours worked, the top 10 most productive countries is almost only European. Per capita the results are different.
But as a worker, do I care where companies have their headquarters? All major tech companies have offices in Europe anyway
The thread you're commenting in is about whether workers can still do good things even if they get breaks, not whether they're currently a member state.
A cursory googling says that Swiss workers get 4 weeks and UK workers get 5.6.