Austria's workers under pressure: Do ÖVP and FPÖ demand more work?

Austria's workers under pressure: Do ÖVP and FPÖ demand more work?

Laimgrubengasse 10, 1060 Wien, Österreich - The debate about working conditions in Austria heats the minds! The leaked protocols of the ongoing FPÖ-ÖVP negotiations reveal explosive demands that, according to Vera Koller, from Ange Vienna, especially women. The first designs pointed out massive deterioration in the world of work. Koller sharply criticizes the ambitions to make people "hostage of the entrepreneurs" and calls for honest communication on the part of those responsible. "It is gruesome to make a person like Kickl a chancellor," said Koller. Austria needs statelessness, where the FPO cannot offer a solution, such as ots.at reported.

In the meantime, industrialized politics relies on longer working hours instead of improving the conditions. The industrial association calls for the introduction of a 41-hour week-and without a salary increase! Employees in Austria are currently working for over average, at 40.8 hours a week and high load. Over 180 million overtime was worked, with some of them remained unpaid, which gave the companies significant savings of 1.3 billion euros. Astrid Mair from the ÖVP even plans to force university graduates into full -time contracts, while the majority of employees want shorter working hours, as recent surveys show. These developments coincide with the statements of kontrast.at , which urgently warn that higher working hours do not increase productivity, but only overload and exhaust workers.

In the middle of this discussion, far -reaching demands for sustainability in working life develop. While the business representatives stand up for longer working hours, unions and some political representatives such as the SPÖ want to shorten working hours in order to meet the needs of employees. The pressure on the population grows - not only through increased work requirements, but also through inflation, which the salaries are continuously eating up. The need for action is more urgent than ever!

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OrtLaimgrubengasse 10, 1060 Wien, Österreich
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