Biggest Slacker Cities Around The World
Somehow I'm not surprised the top two are in that country...
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1.
Spanish workers have a reputation for taking a mid-afternoon siesta to avoid the worst of the sun, and that siesta cuts down their hours substantially. -
2.
Famous for being one of Europe's most laid-back cities, it seems that Amsterdam's reputation is justified. People in the city work an average 1,726 hours per year — 165 fewer than the global average. -
3.
Workers in the Bavarian city, famous for its top-tier football and Oktoberfest celebrations, take an average of 29 days holiday every year, cutting down their overall hours to the lowest level of any city in Germany. -
4.
Citizens of Brussels take the fewest days of holiday of any city on this list — just 18 per year. But that doesn't stop them having one of the best work-life balances on earth, working only 1,717 hours annually. -
5.
Working just 33 hours per week, less than seven per day in a five-day week, people in Lithuania's capital can strike a pretty good balance between their work and leisure time. -
6.
Luxembourg is one of the smallest countries in Europe, and as a result, workers seem to be pretty relaxed about how much work they do, spending just 1,703 hours a year in the office and taking 31 days holiday. -
7.
Despite being in the country's financial hub, Milanese workers are the most relaxed in all of Italy when it comes to work, spending nearly 12% fewer hours in the office compared to the global average. -
8.
Copenhagen was recently voted as the city with the ninth-best quality of life anywhere on earth. Some of that success is probably down to the city's relaxed attitude to working. The average citizen works 11.4% fewer hours than the global average. -
9.
Workers in the Austrian capital spend an average of just 1,678 hours each year at the office, and take 27 days holiday per annum. -
10.
Clocking less than 32 hours a week, or just under 6 1/2 hours a day in a five-day working week, employees in Finland's capital work more than 14% fewer than the average global worker. -
11.
Not only do workers in Russia's capital work just 1,646 hours per year, but they also take nearly 31 days of holiday time each year. -
12.
Despite being the city with the second-best work-life balance in the world, Lyon isn't even top of the list in France. Nonetheless, workers get a pretty sweet deal, working just 1,630 hours a year, and taking an average of 28.5 days holiday. -
13.
Parisians are the easiest-going people of any major city, working just under 31 hours per week, or 1,603.8 hours every year. That's almost 18% fewer hours than the global average.
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