I work for an organisation in the UK, mandated for 35 hours per week. I've worked there for 12 years, I have now 34 paid holiday days per year plus eight public holidays, PLUS five days of Christmas week given free (paid) outside your regular holiday days. On top of that free yoga classes, free mental health checks, free debt helpline and legal advice, free eye tests and staff discounts at local cafes and shops. Also the usual paid sickness leave, paid maternity/paternity leave. There's probably more but forgotten them.
You must do a fairly exalted job (white collar, presumably) for a very secure & profitable company. At my "peak" as lowly IT Analyst/Prog after 6 yrs in the financial s/w sector I got approx, 26 ish days + statutory, maybe 1 or 2 extra over Crimbo. Free BUPA, which I declined on principle.Your package is clearly 1 for the elite, even in the Uk. Maybe you're in law ? I recall doing IT work based for a month at a top City "Magic Circle" outfit & the benefits for them were eyewatering
@@daffyduk77 I worked in the UK civil service in Westminster and terms and conditions were the same for Admin assistants as they were for the Permanent Secretary and annual leave entitlement from day one was 30 days plus 8 statutory holidays (none of which you lost if they fell on a weekend). Sick pay was comprehensive and lasted 6 months if necessary. I also worked for a big Life Assurance firm and the kind of benefits you are assuming are for the ‘elite’ were commonplace amongst all grades so the common lie that the public sector conditions are cushy compared to the private sector was not true in my experience ( the pay though was a probably better in the private sector if you compared like with like). Work life balance is even more strictly enforced in Denmark. If you finish at 5pm you turn your devices off. No one is allowed to contact you unless you are the designated emergency contact. So there’s none of this ‘emails at midnight’ malarkey trying to prove dedication to the job which is commonplace in the US.
@@gerardmackay8909 Yes, whilst I was in private sector I.T., I was "nominally" better paid than my brother, an E.O. in HMRC, but he could (& did) take very favourable early retirement, wildly better pension, far more holidays,, practically unsackable unless you'd m*rdered someone or suchlike. And more benefits too.
Another big difference is that UK/European employers are not generally allowed to contact you whilst you are on holiday/day leave. Your paid time off is for you to switch off and recharge and that is very much respected. And in most instances it is your manager that needs to arrange appropriate cover too! I understand it is the opposite in most instances in the US.
LOL Yes Irishman here working 36 years in the USA field service Medical Imaging Technician fixing MRI, CT, Xray etc. Here they will call you 24/7, Bosses, Customers, Fellow Techs looking for Phone assistance etc. Its the wild west here with no laws or regulations and a lot of unsafe work practices here too !
Holliday and sickness. Here in Denmark, you can't have holidays when sick. Example: Your vacation starts, but the day before, you break your leg. Six weeks in a cast. Because you broke your leg, your vacation will be postponed, to when you are well again. Then you can have your vacation.
Same where I worked in the UK, was off sick with slipped disc for few months, when I returned to work the company still made sure I took my full holiday allowance as well. Work to live in Europe, Live to work in the ISA
So glad that employees have better conditions in UK. Time off is needed for good mental health, it's not that we are lazy (well, some are but most people work hard).
if you are lucky to get paid holiday time.. good luck getting the employer to actually let you use your paid time off.. they will guilt and guilt you.. unless your in a rare great company. As stated a lot of us Americans are scared to take PTO because we pressured not to.. might loose that promotion.. may be seen as an unmotivated worker etc
@@BradBowmannewspoliticsbourbon it was part of my contract of employment…..at first when I started I had 28 days full pay holiday entitlement, every 2 years of service I would have an extra day entitlement added to my holiday period. That worked out 4 weeks 4 days full paid holidays. Because I worked a four day week it was like having 2 months off work. Also had 10 weeks full pay then 10 weeks half pay if I was off due to being injured at work.
Thanks for the added clarification. Here in the states, aside from state holidays like Christmas...we have about two weeks vacation at best. @@bigaldo246
people still are dazzled by the "raw numbers" of before-tax salary. It's disposable income that's the crunch, and quality of life. If you are in the the top 5% of "bargaining power" re: IT, financial, top medical sector expertise it possibly still is. Or if you're very entrepreneurially savvy & good at persuading backers for schemes or start-ups etc.
I work a 35 hour, 4 day week and get 36 days off per year, (34 for first 5 years, then 2 more for seniority after 5 years), we don’t get public holidays because I work in an essential industry that runs 24/7, this adds up to 9 weeks per year. This is pretty standard in my industry.
I left my previous job after 5.5 years with 18 days of unused holiday pay. Iwas paid out for those 18 days in my last salery payment. I started in my new role with 20 days annual holiday allowance in addition to 12 days of public holiday, I am also entitled to 15 days of paid sick leave per year. When I have worked for my current employer for 6 years my holiday entitlement will increase from 20 to 25 days per year. A few years ago the government here Mondayized the public holidays, if a holiday falls on the weekend it moves to the following Monday so people dont miss out.
The mental toll here in America from working a lot with little pto to take breaks is terrible. You hoard pto and try your best to push through times when you need to rest. If for example I want to take one two week vacation in Europe a year, I gotta push through all the holidays, just to make it work.
On top of 4 weeks annual leave with 17% loading, Australians also get long service leave which is based on 13 weeks after 15 years. In Western Australia employees can claim 8 weeks long service after 10 years. Most American working conditions are nothing more than bonded servitude. I worked for the Australian Government where the work day was 7 hours 21 with flex time (no paid overtime). Daily start time was optional, as with completion time. I could accrue extra time to take "flex days" which is restricted to 1 per fortnight. Employees could not accrue more the 10 hours or be more than 5 hours in debit. Working an extra 45 minutes per day made it possible to have a flex day every fortnight, depending on staff availability.
I am in the US and I am very lucky to get 28days vacation off the back with my company. Then added us holidays plus sick days and personal and pls for death in family (3days).I also get the week of from Christmas thru new years day fully paid. And I get also random days off when they want too like mental days or employee appreciation days off with pay. It's a very large media company! With media agencies under is umbrella But here's why I get all of that...are you ready?? It's a UK owned/based company ! Lol lol that is why! So I get off the back 28 days reg vacation. 5 sick days. 3 personal. 6 "free days" used mostly summer but now they are saying to be used before November of that calendar year. Then now add on the US holidays like Thanksgiving thursday & Friday off with pay. Forth of July if the 4th falls on a Tuesday we get Monday off as well with oay. The whike week between Christmas and NY'S and there a 2hr window for lunch if needed (it's reg an hour break with 9 to 530 work scheduled hrs ) I WFH so this is even better. This is why I want to relocate to the UK (Scotland particularly) I'm ust nit ready to ask for a transfer (that's if they okay it) wondering what the work visa process would be like for them ??🤔 Will cross tgat bridge when I get there I guess . Thanks for sharing! I had a feeling working fir a UK MAIN Office based n owner was a blessing whenI first started working for one of their agencies back in 2014. Almost 10yrs now and it only gets better n better with time off! 😊
"Forth of July if the 4th falls on a Tuesday" What the flying f*ck a UK-based comp is celebrating Independence Day for ... 🙂 If I owned the comp I'd expect unpaid o/t from them😄(as restitution)
@@anthonydpearson thanks already did the math and it works out fine. the cost of living over in the UK where I want to go including having to pay my own water electric and gas etc. works out the same. My salary in the UK would cover my living and food all just the same as it would if it was here in the US converted back to USD. Already did my research on it including Health care food etc. US rents here an average 1 bedroom with heat and hot water and garbage collection is 1500.mnonth in NY its 2500 a month so..yeah it all depends where you live and how much you are making. Trust me..I wouldn't go to another country or even US state at that where the cost (with dollar conversion) be higher . US is too busty an the food is all bad. and expensive. UK its illegal to add certain preservatives and stuff to the foods grown and made there. TOTALLY better! .but thanks for your insight! It's to each its own..
I’ve been working as a dental hygienist for 30 years in Kansas and after traveling overseas and visiting Scotland, England, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Germany, and Italy, I will say they truly do have a healthier, calmer, safer, and much more secure life. One thing I have noticed is that the two generations behind mine (I’m GenX) are doing that has changed the workplace is that they call in a lot more often. While at first i thought “lazy millennials” but I’ve now come to realize is that they grew up KNOWING what life was like as they were the first generation that basically had the internet from day one and could virtually visit and learn about these countries. My wife recently went back into banking and was amazed at what she was offered in comparison to when she left the industry 6 years ago. She was hired at a completely different bank with 6 weeks paid vacation, 20 PTO days per year, and she negotiated up on both pay and vacation. Now if our backwards state would expand Medicare and legalize weed (we’re surrounded on three sides with it already), we could get out of the 1800’s here.
@@terranwoolley4226 Its true. You have idiots coming out of university with a media studies degree expecting 50k, expecting to be able to buy property in central London at 25, expecting everyone to bend over backwards to them. They're the most deluded, naive, workshy generation there has ever been. The world doesn't owe you a living, but for many born on the last 20 years, it seems they think it does. Please don't question which time I'm from when you're American, the most backward country on the developed world.
@@sandersson2813 We have more accurate and realistic expectations in life. Working your ass off for your entire life like a good little worker bee for 10-15 years of sad old tired retirement is NOT the way to live.
@@sandersson2813 Don't be bitter at younger people just cause you got exploited and spit out like a broken part. They have proof that people in other 1st world nations are living 3Xs better than they are just because we allowed corporations to run our government. Really. Don't be afraid to admit they screwed you and you can't do anything about it as a result of your own voting results. This is 1 of your "life lessons", old timer. They so-called kids know what's up. A person working in a McDonald's in Germany can support their family with that 1 job. Why can't an honest person do that here? Please explain this to me. What's the difference?
Most employers I have worked for (UK) pay 6 months sick leave in a 4 year period. Having said that, it was 2005 the last time I was off sick. I can't imagine working a month without a days leave let alone a year. I have managed my full 30 days, so will carry over 5 days into 2024. Woohoo!!!
I retired at the end of last May, so I was entitled to 5/12ths of my leave allocation this year; as it happens, I don’t usually take much time off in the winter because the weather’s miserable, and we had 5 days of public holidays in April/May this year (2 at Easter, the May Day holiday, the Spring holiday, and the extra day for the Coronation), so I’d actually only used 6 days’ leave by the time I retired, and the rest of my allocation was paid with my final salary. In an earlier life, I was made redundant with a number of other people after I’d been with the same company for over 22 years; my employment contract was rather more generous than the statutory minimum, so I was paid so many weeks’ salary for each year of service; a higher rate for each year of service after age 40; and they made the mistake of making us redundant in the third week of January, so they also had to buy out that years’ entire leave entitlement (30 days!). My final redundancy payment amounted to over a years’ salary.
I'm in the UK and get 41 days paid leave (including the bank holidays), plus we're allowed 3 days on top of that to volunteer for a good cause, also fully paid.
I retired 11 years ago here in the UK, my last job I was in for 22 years and got 30 days paid Annual Leave NOT COUNTING the 12 days Public Holidays! Can’t imagine how Americans cope.
@@normanpearson8753 civil servants always got 2 ‘privilege’ days, one at Christmas and one added on to Spring Bank Holiday so that made 10 but 12 is a stretch
@@gerardmackay8909 Nope . 4 , in my branch of the C .S. Can't tell you which one , but has thousands of employees , we're not talking a small off shoot .
I get 36 days, including the 8 bank holidays, and up to one year on full pay for sickness. Because at least 20 days off is mandatory you can end up with your employer forcing you to take paid time off, usually towards the end of the financial year, if you haven’t taken enough leave yet.
I work with annualised hours. 1820hrs per year. If I've not been required and I'm under hours I'm still paid the contracted full amount. If I'm over I get a sliding scale. Single time for 10 hrs, 1.25 for 10 to 20, 1.5 for 20 to 30 and double time if it's more than 30 hours over. It's calculated every quarter. If you're over you can choose payment or time off. On top of 33 days leave and 6 months full sick pay it means you could be absent from work almost 7 months full pay with no repercussions.
OMG I used to love working Flexitime. Each month, 1st 2 weeks of 4 hrs/day and 2 weeks of 10 hrs a day approx. No carryover to next month but you could save up a Flexiday's holiday leave instead
You didn't mention that in the UK it's usually to still be paid when on sick leave. In my job before I retired, I would have been paid in full for the first 6 months of sick leave and half pay for the next 6 months. In the USA people take PTO when they're ill because they get zilch otherwise. They also have to find someone else to do their job which seems weird from a British perspective.
Another big difference is that we in America do not get paid a lot..so we work every hour we can to make enough money to pay for housing and food..any "time off" is not paid thus it is money out of your pocket. I worked 100 hour weeks for several years, got lots of OT and was very happy to get it..I paid off my house in 12 years..on a 30 year morgage..
Your U..S. pay , on average , is better than U.K . True , you may have medical expenses , but 100 hours is mad , man , ....well done , tho' .Best from a wet , cold England .
Yes. When you get a new job here they’ll always ask if you have any holidays pre-booked and they’ll almost always still let you take those holidays, even if they’re on days that you normally might not get off. That doesn’t exist in the states lol
For sure! But regardless of what the company does, you’ll still start out with more holiday on day one than you would ever get in a lifetime of working for most American companies
I was lucky with my US employers - thought starting with 3 weeks vacation was hard after moving from UK 😜 Stayed at company long enough to get to 6 weeks vacation…and then they switched us to unlimited PTO 🙄 As highly suspicious employees we quickly figured out this was just a nice loophole to mean they didn’t have to pay us any accrued PTO if we left 😡 I’m so Americanized now that the 2 week vacation did seem soooo long - that’s just sad!
So many Brits dont realise that this was exactly the same prior to the EU Working Time Directive gave the legal right to paid time off for annual leave. It also gave part timers the same rights at work that full timers did and introduced laws on rest periods. It so annoyed me when so many voted to leave the EU when this is just one thing normal working people benefitted from EU membership.
@@muzz852 no offence but that's a naïve question.. as it depends on who's making the laws. most Tories would like nothing better than to remove worker friendly laws
And that all changed seven years ago ... no it didn't. Your reasoning is akin to people staying with an abusive partner because they're sometimes nice to them.
@@pams4401 yes, "social dumping" & US/China-style practices were what Truss had in mind. I'm sure Badenoch's working on those lines. Sunak knew he'd never have gotten it through last time
I’m not sure that is the case about teaching anywhere, definitely not Scotland. Also Americas idea of an engineer is very much different to Europe. He might not be properly qualified over here.
@@bobdidit55 Indeed, you need to have knowledge and skills gained through The Teaching Council, plus you'd have to learn a completely new curriculum, and if you're a Geography teacher, you'll have to learn there's a world outside the USA 😂😂😂
I’m retired now,but the best and most secure jobs are due to Union membership and Union representation. Ordinary workers have to be in a Union to protect their rights and welfare!
in the banana republic of amerika you are treated like your only reason for existing is to get a job and do nothing but work that job. you are treated like the property of the company. they own you. you are treated like the scum of the earth if there is a 'GAP IN YOUR WORK RECORD.' it's a rotten place to live.
WHY? What is the reasoning behind the US Lack of Employment Value? They would get better (rested) employees if they gave them time off. Unemployment would be way down as well, because people would enjoy going to work, because they know they will get 28+ days off a year. Then it theres the issue with NO FREE HEALTH CARE - Even countries which the US calls third world have Free Health Care.
When a company is down sizing, in a America you still call it "fired" when its redundancy in the rest of the world. You're "fired" in other countries if you do something wrong in job, that warrants firing.
@@peterkonradort maybe we hear it being called fired, when it's being politised by a particular party. But you certainly can't be fired in European countries without going through a fair process. Not to say companies don't it, and if you believe you have been fired unfairly, there are mechanisms to challenge the firing. And companies are made pay compensation if found to have broken company policies on disciplineary procedures. or someone was fired no good reason.
In all honesty, America doesn’t seem like the greatest country in the world 😂. Bad employment laws Bad education (not that Scotland is that great atm) And no free healthcare.
I disagree with just one of your statements. You said that UK employers have to pay you for any untaken leave if you quit. I don't believe that is true. However, they must pay you for any accrued leave. So, if you leave 6 months through the leave year and haven't taken any leave, then they owe you half of your annual entitlement, and so on. For example, every month worked during the year may earn you a 2 1/2 day leave entitlement.
I’ll try to be more clear in future videos! When I say untaken annual leave I mean annual leave that you have already earned but not taken. To be fair the same goes the opposite direction, if you take more annual leave than you’ve earned and you leave the company then you’ll have to pay back what you hadn’t earned yet.
@@peterkonradort No problem and I only mentioned it to correct any wrong impression given. Companies can claw any excess back but I wonder how many do. Taking more than your accrued allowance before leaving is probably quite rare.
@@RonSeymour1 yeah it did happen at the last company I worked for but it was not very common. I was a manager and I still had to get approval from my boss before I could let my guys do it lol
Ok the fact that too many Americans don’t have the money or the time to go abroad is perfectly valid, but there’s also another factor, that America is about the same size as Europe, with a huge variety of geographies and climates, allowing for skiing, hiking, camping, surfing, sunbathing and city exploring all within the same country, admittedly, sometimes with less charm, beauty or cultural weight than European counterparts.
Funnily enough - it's becoming as cost efective to ski/snowboard in Europe, as US resorts are becoming extortionate monopolies. Anyway, travel broadens the mind. Truth.
Peter, I meant to say .... The danger is with your videos that the UK is going to be flooded with immigrants from the USA. Perhaps you need to put in the odd negative thing about the UK but to be honest I cannot think of anything you could say. Errr, lets see ......
You're mixing up what is mandated, and what is reality. You're right that in the UK, the government has much more say over how employers treat employees and often mandate lots of holiday. In the US, the attitude is 'you're all grownups, figure it out yourselves. We don't need you to pay taxes so that other people can decide how grownups at a company should treat each other'. So while nothing is required, I've always found the US paid vacation to be perfectly fine. I get 28 days off a year (5.5 weeks), plus we don't work Fridays in summer, plus we get the 12 Federal holidays. And best of all, my salary is double what I'd make in the UK, and I didn't need to pay anywhere near as much tax just for the government to tell us how to act.
You obviously have no idea of (or the "reality" of as you say) how the majority of Americans have as far as vacation and/or personal time as well as sick time. Your perspective is kind of skewed and ignorant. We work hard and tend to understand what is offered by the company policy. We don't need to be pampered by the state because we aren't as weak as the UK and Europe. But I guess that says it all. UK is a conglomerate and not a few independent nations such as Scotland. Keep bending the knee my friend to whichever overlord keeps you weak and submissive with their handouts.
@@davidconley6267 just wondering how else you managed to obtain such a huge amount of pig ignorant bigotry...no guessing who you voted for in the last presidential election...or can you surprise me there too?
Of course you are not weak and pampered. You are not weak and pampered because you are too busy licking the bosses arse and begging not to be sacked because your health insurance will go out the window if you get sacked. Your country, the good old US of A, is a business first and foremost and a country a very poor and distant second. Why would anyone in their right mind want to live in a country that charges you an arm and a leg just to get a doctor's appointment? And leave you about £250,000 in debt when you finish your education. And the food, if you can call it that, is so full of sugar, additives and whatever else that it's BANNED in the UK and Europe. So yes you stay in the good old US of A with your guns by your side claiming that we are not weak and pampered.
I work for an organisation in the UK, mandated for 35 hours per week. I've worked there for 12 years, I have now 34 paid holiday days per year plus eight public holidays, PLUS five days of Christmas week given free (paid) outside your regular holiday days. On top of that free yoga classes, free mental health checks, free debt helpline and legal advice, free eye tests and staff discounts at local cafes and shops. Also the usual paid sickness leave, paid maternity/paternity leave. There's probably more but forgotten them.
You must do a fairly exalted job (white collar, presumably) for a very secure & profitable company. At my "peak" as lowly IT Analyst/Prog after 6 yrs in the financial s/w sector I got approx, 26 ish days + statutory, maybe 1 or 2 extra over Crimbo. Free BUPA, which I declined on principle.Your package is clearly 1 for the elite, even in the Uk. Maybe you're in law ? I recall doing IT work based for a month at a top City "Magic Circle" outfit & the benefits for them were eyewatering
@@daffyduk77 I'm a Production Manager in publishing.
@@daffyduk77 I'm a Production Manager in publishing.
@@daffyduk77 I worked in the UK civil service in Westminster and terms and conditions were the same for Admin assistants as they were for the Permanent Secretary and annual leave entitlement from day one was 30 days plus 8 statutory holidays (none of which you lost if they fell on a weekend). Sick pay was comprehensive and lasted 6 months if necessary. I also worked for a big Life Assurance firm and the kind of benefits you are assuming are for the ‘elite’ were commonplace amongst all grades so the common lie that the public sector conditions are cushy compared to the private sector was not true in my experience ( the pay though was a probably better in the private sector if you compared like with like). Work life balance is even more strictly enforced in Denmark. If you finish at 5pm you turn your devices off. No one is allowed to contact you unless you are the designated emergency contact. So there’s none of this ‘emails at midnight’ malarkey trying to prove dedication to the job which is commonplace in the US.
@@gerardmackay8909 Yes, whilst I was in private sector I.T., I was "nominally" better paid than my brother, an E.O. in HMRC, but he could (& did) take very favourable early retirement, wildly better pension, far more holidays,, practically unsackable unless you'd m*rdered someone or suchlike. And more benefits too.
Another big difference is that UK/European employers are not generally allowed to contact you whilst you are on holiday/day leave. Your paid time off is for you to switch off and recharge and that is very much respected. And in most instances it is your manager that needs to arrange appropriate cover too! I understand it is the opposite in most instances in the US.
It's also against the law for them to contact you if you've rung in sick.
LOL Yes Irishman here working 36 years in the USA field service Medical Imaging Technician fixing MRI, CT, Xray etc. Here they will call you 24/7, Bosses, Customers, Fellow Techs looking for Phone assistance etc. Its the wild west here with no laws or regulations and a lot of unsafe work practices here too !
Everybody should be in a Union they will get legal representation in any dispute
Holliday and sickness.
Here in Denmark, you can't have holidays when sick.
Example: Your vacation starts, but the day before, you break your leg. Six weeks in a cast. Because you broke your leg, your vacation will be postponed, to when you are well again. Then you can have your vacation.
That's the same here you get the holidays back if your not fit to work
Yes I think several countries do that, it’s great!
Same here (UK).
I should damn well think so , too .
Same where I worked in the UK, was off sick with slipped disc for few months, when I returned to work the company still made sure I took my full holiday allowance as well. Work to live in Europe, Live to work in the ISA
So glad that employees have better conditions in UK. Time off is needed for good mental health, it's not that we are lazy (well, some are but most people work hard).
I recently retired here in the UK from a food factory after 28 years! By then I was up to 31 days annual leave + 8 days public holidays
I've just retired from the Civil Service, and had the same amount of bank holidays and annual leave.
if you are lucky to get paid holiday time.. good luck getting the employer to actually let you use your paid time off.. they will guilt and guilt you.. unless your in a rare great company. As stated a lot of us Americans are scared to take PTO because we pressured not to.. might loose that promotion.. may be seen as an unmotivated worker etc
What a toxic culture. Holidays esp. with family are about mental & physical wellbeing
I’m from Scotland, my last job I worked a four day week and was entitled to 32 days paid holiday every year😎🏴✌️
Is that paid vacation or time including holidays?
@@BradBowmannewspoliticsbourbon it was part of my contract of employment…..at first when I started I had 28 days full pay holiday entitlement, every 2 years of service I would have an extra day entitlement added to my holiday period. That worked out 4 weeks 4 days full paid holidays. Because I worked a four day week it was like having 2 months off work. Also had 10 weeks full pay then 10 weeks half pay if I was off due to being injured at work.
Thanks for the added clarification. Here in the states, aside from state holidays like Christmas...we have about two weeks vacation at best.
@@bigaldo246
And to think when I was growing up in the fifties, sixties and seventies, people here in the UK aspired to living in the US.
people still are dazzled by the "raw numbers" of before-tax salary. It's disposable income that's the crunch, and quality of life. If you are in the the top 5% of "bargaining power" re: IT, financial, top medical sector expertise it possibly still is. Or if you're very entrepreneurially savvy & good at persuading backers for schemes or start-ups etc.
I work a 35 hour, 4 day week and get 36 days off per year, (34 for first 5 years, then 2 more for seniority after 5 years), we don’t get public holidays because I work in an essential industry that runs 24/7, this adds up to 9 weeks per year. This is pretty standard in my industry.
What else is ridiculous in the US is that you can be let go on the spot.
Europe has redundancy processes enshrined in law.
Yes, most places in the US they can fire you immediately without any reason! It’s ridiculous
@@peterkonradort Not to mention US Maternity leave.
@@sandersson2813 oh yeah, many places in the US will straight up fire you if you get pregnant
@@peterkonradort That's maternity leave US-style 🙂 But if I was a woman I wouldn't make light of it
Thank Reagan for that one
I left my previous job after 5.5 years with 18 days of unused holiday pay. Iwas paid out for those 18 days in my last salery payment. I started in my new role with 20 days annual holiday allowance in addition to 12 days of public holiday, I am also entitled to 15 days of paid sick leave per year. When I have worked for my current employer for 6 years my holiday entitlement will increase from 20 to 25 days per year.
A few years ago the government here Mondayized the public holidays, if a holiday falls on the weekend it moves to the following Monday so people dont miss out.
The mental toll here in America from working a lot with little pto to take breaks is terrible. You hoard pto and try your best to push through times when you need to rest. If for example I want to take one two week vacation in Europe a year, I gotta push through all the holidays, just to make it work.
On top of 4 weeks annual leave with 17% loading, Australians also get long service leave which is based on 13 weeks after 15 years.
In Western Australia employees can claim 8 weeks long service after 10 years. Most American working conditions are nothing more than bonded servitude.
I worked for the Australian Government where the work day was 7 hours 21 with flex time (no paid overtime). Daily start time was optional, as with completion time.
I could accrue extra time to take "flex days" which is restricted to 1 per fortnight. Employees could not accrue more the 10 hours or be more than 5 hours in debit.
Working an extra 45 minutes per day made it possible to have a flex day every fortnight, depending on staff availability.
In Estonia we get 28 days off by law but that includes weekends so it's four weeks. My employer adds another 5 days to that, making it five weeks.
I am in the US and I am very lucky to get 28days vacation off the back with my company. Then added us holidays plus sick days and personal and pls for death in family (3days).I also get the week of from Christmas thru new years day fully paid. And I get also random days off when they want too like mental days or employee appreciation days off with pay. It's a very large media company! With media agencies under is umbrella But here's why I get all of that...are you ready?? It's a UK owned/based company ! Lol lol that is why!
So I get off the back 28 days reg vacation. 5 sick days. 3 personal. 6 "free days" used mostly summer but now they are saying to be used before November of that calendar year. Then now add on the US holidays like Thanksgiving thursday & Friday off with pay. Forth of July if the 4th falls on a Tuesday we get Monday off as well with oay. The whike week between Christmas and NY'S and there a 2hr window for lunch if needed (it's reg an hour break with 9 to 530 work scheduled hrs ) I WFH so this is even better.
This is why I want to relocate to the UK (Scotland particularly) I'm ust nit ready to ask for a transfer (that's if they okay it) wondering what the work visa process would be like for them ??🤔
Will cross tgat bridge when I get there I guess .
Thanks for sharing! I had a feeling working fir a UK MAIN Office based n owner was a blessing whenI first started working for one of their agencies back in 2014. Almost 10yrs now and it only gets better n better with time off! 😊
"Forth of July if the 4th falls on a Tuesday" What the flying f*ck a UK-based comp is celebrating Independence Day for ... 🙂 If I owned the comp I'd expect unpaid o/t from them😄(as restitution)
As great as it sounds, wait til you get to the UK and realize that wages are 1/2 of what they are in the US. Grass is always greener.
@@anthonydpearson thanks already did the math and it works out fine. the cost of living over in the UK where I want to go including having to pay my own water electric and gas etc. works out the same. My salary in the UK would cover my living and food all just the same as it would if it was here in the US converted back to USD. Already did my research on it including Health care food etc. US rents here an average 1 bedroom with heat and hot water and garbage collection is 1500.mnonth in NY its 2500 a month so..yeah it all depends where you live and how much you are making. Trust me..I wouldn't go to another country or even US state at that where the cost (with dollar conversion) be higher . US is too busty an the food is all bad. and expensive. UK its illegal to add certain preservatives and stuff to the foods grown and made there. TOTALLY better! .but thanks for your insight! It's to each its own..
I’ve been working as a dental hygienist for 30 years in Kansas and after traveling overseas and visiting Scotland, England, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Germany, and Italy, I will say they truly do have a healthier, calmer, safer, and much more secure life. One thing I have noticed is that the two generations behind mine (I’m GenX) are doing that has changed the workplace is that they call in a lot more often. While at first i thought “lazy millennials” but I’ve now come to realize is that they grew up KNOWING what life was like as they were the first generation that basically had the internet from day one and could virtually visit and learn about these countries.
My wife recently went back into banking and was amazed at what she was offered in comparison to when she left the industry 6 years ago. She was hired at a completely different bank with 6 weeks paid vacation, 20 PTO days per year, and she negotiated up on both pay and vacation.
Now if our backwards state would expand Medicare and legalize weed (we’re surrounded on three sides with it already), we could get out of the 1800’s here.
Recent generations have ridiculous expectations in life.
@@sandersson2813 what time did you travel from?
@@terranwoolley4226 Its true. You have idiots coming out of university with a media studies degree expecting 50k, expecting to be able to buy property in central London at 25, expecting everyone to bend over backwards to them.
They're the most deluded, naive, workshy generation there has ever been.
The world doesn't owe you a living, but for many born on the last 20 years, it seems they think it does.
Please don't question which time I'm from when you're American, the most backward country on the developed world.
@@sandersson2813 We have more accurate and realistic expectations in life. Working your ass off for your entire life like a good little worker bee for 10-15 years of sad old tired retirement is NOT the way to live.
@@sandersson2813
Don't be bitter at younger people just cause you got exploited and spit out like a broken part. They have proof that people in other 1st world nations are living 3Xs better than they are just because we allowed corporations to run our government.
Really. Don't be afraid to admit they screwed you and you can't do anything about it as a result of your own voting results. This is 1 of your "life lessons", old timer. They so-called kids know what's up. A person working in a McDonald's in Germany can support their family with that 1 job. Why can't an honest person do that here? Please explain this to me. What's the difference?
Most employers I have worked for (UK) pay 6 months sick leave in a 4 year period. Having said that, it was 2005 the last time I was off sick. I can't imagine working a month without a days leave let alone a year. I have managed my full 30 days, so will carry over 5 days into 2024. Woohoo!!!
Get in !
Richest country in the world! Go figure.
Rich in wealth, destitute in social responsibility.
I retired at the end of last May, so I was entitled to 5/12ths of my leave allocation this year; as it happens, I don’t usually take much time off in the winter because the weather’s miserable, and we had 5 days of public holidays in April/May this year (2 at Easter, the May Day holiday, the Spring holiday, and the extra day for the Coronation), so I’d actually only used 6 days’ leave by the time I retired, and the rest of my allocation was paid with my final salary.
In an earlier life, I was made redundant with a number of other people after I’d been with the same company for over 22 years; my employment contract was rather more generous than the statutory minimum, so I was paid so many weeks’ salary for each year of service; a higher rate for each year of service after age 40; and they made the mistake of making us redundant in the third week of January, so they also had to buy out that years’ entire leave entitlement (30 days!). My final redundancy payment amounted to over a years’ salary.
I'm in the UK and get 41 days paid leave (including the bank holidays), plus we're allowed 3 days on top of that to volunteer for a good cause, also fully paid.
I retired 11 years ago here in the UK, my last job I was in for 22 years and got 30 days paid Annual Leave NOT COUNTING the 12 days Public Holidays! Can’t imagine how Americans cope.
12? 8 , surely?!
@@normanpearson8753 civil service working at Air Command we got a few extra as far as I remember.
@@normanpearson8753 civil servants always got 2 ‘privilege’ days, one at Christmas and one added on to Spring Bank Holiday so that made 10 but 12 is a stretch
@@gerardmackay8909 Nope . 4 , in my branch of the C .S. Can't tell you which one , but has thousands of employees , we're not talking a small off shoot .
@@normanpearson8753 well maybe the culture has changed since I left. Sad if that is the case
20 days , in UK , is rare .25 , many employers give 30 days yearly .
I get 36 days, including the 8 bank holidays, and up to one year on full pay for sickness.
Because at least 20 days off is mandatory you can end up with your employer forcing you to take paid time off, usually towards the end of the financial year, if you haven’t taken enough leave yet.
I work with annualised hours. 1820hrs per year. If I've not been required and I'm under hours I'm still paid the contracted full amount. If I'm over I get a sliding scale. Single time for 10 hrs, 1.25 for 10 to 20, 1.5 for 20 to 30 and double time if it's more than 30 hours over. It's calculated every quarter. If you're over you can choose payment or time off. On top of 33 days leave and 6 months full sick pay it means you could be absent from work almost 7 months full pay with no repercussions.
OMG I used to love working Flexitime. Each month, 1st 2 weeks of 4 hrs/day and 2 weeks of 10 hrs a day approx. No carryover to next month but you could save up a Flexiday's holiday leave instead
You didn't mention that in the UK it's usually to still be paid when on sick leave. In my job before I retired, I would have been paid in full for the first 6 months of sick leave and half pay for the next 6 months. In the USA people take PTO when they're ill because they get zilch otherwise. They also have to find someone else to do their job which seems weird from a British perspective.
Another big difference is that we in America do not get paid a lot..so we work every hour we can to make enough money to pay for housing and food..any "time off" is not paid thus it is money out of your pocket. I worked 100 hour weeks for several years, got lots of OT and was very happy to get it..I paid off my house in 12 years..on a 30 year morgage..
Your U..S. pay , on average , is better than U.K . True , you may have medical expenses , but 100 hours is mad , man , ....well done , tho' .Best from a wet , cold England .
I guarantee you you're getting paid more than in the UK. Average UK salary is 37,000 pounds - around $47,000.
Thanks you for sharing
Working as a governnent employee ,Civil Servant I soon had 42 days annual leave ; 30 days basic , 8 Public Hols ., 4 Public Sector days .Bliss .
In Britain I've often seen jobs adverts saying, 'Prior holiday booking honoured'.
Yes. When you get a new job here they’ll always ask if you have any holidays pre-booked and they’ll almost always still let you take those holidays, even if they’re on days that you normally might not get off. That doesn’t exist in the states lol
With many UK companies you will accrue more holiday days on top of the minimum based on how long you've worked for the company.
For sure! But regardless of what the company does, you’ll still start out with more holiday on day one than you would ever get in a lifetime of working for most American companies
Awesome 👍👍👍
i had 41 days off working for a university in Belfast
I thought slavery was abolished in the US. Apparently not!
I was lucky with my US employers - thought starting with 3 weeks vacation was hard after moving from UK 😜 Stayed at company long enough to get to 6 weeks vacation…and then they switched us to unlimited PTO 🙄 As highly suspicious employees we quickly figured out this was just a nice loophole to mean they didn’t have to pay us any accrued PTO if we left 😡
I’m so Americanized now that the 2 week vacation did seem soooo long - that’s just sad!
I don't have any vacation time (paid) in America, already working nonstop for 6 years, having 10 minutes break only every day.
Technically a slave.
I get 12 weeks paid holidays, wouldn't settle for less... life is for living.
So many Brits dont realise that this was exactly the same prior to the EU Working Time Directive gave the legal right to paid time off for annual leave. It also gave part timers the same rights at work that full timers did and introduced laws on rest periods.
It so annoyed me when so many voted to leave the EU when this is just one thing normal working people benefitted from EU membership.
But leaving doesn't mean it has to change though does it, or that the UK can't implement their own sensible labour laws.
@@muzz852 no offence but that's a naïve question.. as it depends on who's making the laws. most Tories would like nothing better than to remove worker friendly laws
And that all changed seven years ago ... no it didn't. Your reasoning is akin to people staying with an abusive partner because they're sometimes nice to them.
@@thegroovetube3247 - the EU abused you? Do tell?
@@pams4401 yes, "social dumping" & US/China-style practices were what Truss had in mind. I'm sure Badenoch's working on those lines. Sunak knew he'd never have gotten it through last time
i worked for a business in Santa Monica for 18.5 years 26 hours a week and got ZERO paid vacation
Lord , I worked in the UK , we got 42 days off , yearly ,,,,including Public Holidays . 30 , plus 8 PH s plus 4,,, more! Get over here !
So how does one find an electrical engineering job in Europe? My husband swears they don’t exist. I’m a teacher and can teach anywhere.
Yeah, we don't have a single electrical engineer in the whole of Europe, we all live in caves. 🙄 but some of us have running water.
Do a job search, "engineer Scotland" ! Lots of them.
Try UK recruitment agencies and search for the type of Electrical engineering he does.
I’m not sure that is the case about teaching anywhere, definitely not Scotland.
Also Americas idea of an engineer is very much different to Europe. He might not be properly qualified over here.
@@bobdidit55 Indeed, you need to have knowledge and skills gained through The Teaching Council, plus you'd have to learn a completely new curriculum, and if you're a Geography teacher, you'll have to learn there's a world outside the USA 😂😂😂
I’m retired now,but the best and most secure jobs are due to Union membership and Union representation. Ordinary workers have to be in a Union to protect their rights and welfare!
I now get 12 months PAID Vacation/Holiday per year....... Tony in Essex
in the banana republic of amerika you are treated like your only reason for existing is to get a job and do nothing but work that job. you are treated like the property of the company. they own you. you are treated like the scum of the earth if there is a 'GAP IN YOUR WORK RECORD.' it's a rotten place to live.
Did Angela return to the states? 😢
No she's still here in town! We're co-parenting the best we can.
WHY?
What is the reasoning behind the US Lack of Employment Value?
They would get better (rested) employees if they gave them time off.
Unemployment would be way down as well, because people would enjoy going to work, because they know they will get 28+ days off a year.
Then it theres the issue with NO FREE HEALTH CARE - Even countries which the US calls third world have Free Health Care.
It's the land of the free. Free to be completely exploited for profit on the lie of the American Dream....
That figures!
When a company is down sizing, in a America you still call it "fired" when its redundancy in the rest of the world. You're "fired" in other countries if you do something wrong in job, that warrants firing.
In the US they actually usually call redundancies “lay offs” or being laid off!
@@peterkonradort maybe we hear it being called fired, when it's being politised by a particular party.
But you certainly can't be fired in European countries without going through a fair process. Not to say companies don't it, and if you believe you have been fired unfairly, there are mechanisms to challenge the firing. And companies are made pay compensation if found to have broken company policies on disciplineary procedures. or someone was fired no good reason.
In all honesty, America doesn’t seem like the greatest country in the world 😂.
Bad employment laws
Bad education (not that Scotland is that great atm)
And no free healthcare.
But they have "freedom"😂 or some nonsense like that. All these commie countries giving paid holidays disgraceful!!!!
Odd - my kids secondary school here in Glasgow is awesome, as was their primary. What's your experience of bad education in Scotland?
In the US, they just quit
, take time off, then look for another job.
For many Americans, the only time off work that they can get is any time they have between jobs.
If you leave or have a job finish, you due Holiday pay quota is tax free.
I take it you never got paid for sick days in the US ?
This is paid time off in the United States compared to the United Kingdom! 🇺🇸 🇬🇧
I disagree with just one of your statements. You said that UK employers have to pay you for any untaken leave if you quit. I don't believe that is true. However, they must pay you for any accrued leave. So, if you leave 6 months through the leave year and haven't taken any leave, then they owe you half of your annual entitlement, and so on. For example, every month worked during the year may earn you a 2 1/2 day leave entitlement.
I’ll try to be more clear in future videos! When I say untaken annual leave I mean annual leave that you have already earned but not taken.
To be fair the same goes the opposite direction, if you take more annual leave than you’ve earned and you leave the company then you’ll have to pay back what you hadn’t earned yet.
@@peterkonradort No problem and I only mentioned it to correct any wrong impression given. Companies can claw any excess back but I wonder how many do. Taking more than your accrued allowance before leaving is probably quite rare.
@@RonSeymour1 yeah it did happen at the last company I worked for but it was not very common. I was a manager and I still had to get approval from my boss before I could let my guys do it lol
Ok the fact that too many Americans don’t have the money or the time to go abroad is perfectly valid, but there’s also another factor, that America is about the same size as Europe, with a huge variety of geographies and climates, allowing for skiing, hiking, camping, surfing, sunbathing and city exploring all within the same country, admittedly, sometimes with less charm, beauty or cultural weight than European counterparts.
Yeah, sure.
Funnily enough - it's becoming as cost efective to ski/snowboard in Europe, as US resorts are becoming extortionate monopolies. Anyway, travel broadens the mind. Truth.
US doesn't jail you for wrongthink though.
What does that incoherent garbage even mean?
Peter, the danger is with your videos that the UK is going to be flooded with imagrants
Peter, I meant to say .... The danger is with your videos that the UK is going to be flooded with immigrants from the USA. Perhaps you need to put in the odd negative thing about the UK but to be honest I cannot think of anything you could say. Errr, lets see ......
Funny but true🤣
The USA is not that fun
You're mixing up what is mandated, and what is reality. You're right that in the UK, the government has much more say over how employers treat employees and often mandate lots of holiday. In the US, the attitude is 'you're all grownups, figure it out yourselves. We don't need you to pay taxes so that other people can decide how grownups at a company should treat each other'. So while nothing is required, I've always found the US paid vacation to be perfectly fine. I get 28 days off a year (5.5 weeks), plus we don't work Fridays in summer, plus we get the 12 Federal holidays. And best of all, my salary is double what I'd make in the UK, and I didn't need to pay anywhere near as much tax just for the government to tell us how to act.
You obviously have no idea of (or the "reality" of as you say) how the majority of Americans have as far as vacation and/or personal time as well as sick time. Your perspective is kind of skewed and ignorant. We work hard and tend to understand what is offered by the company policy. We don't need to be pampered by the state because we aren't as weak as the UK and Europe. But I guess that says it all. UK is a conglomerate and not a few independent nations such as Scotland. Keep bending the knee my friend to whichever overlord keeps you weak and submissive with their handouts.
koolaid glug glug
yeah, right! I bet you don't even have a passport!
@Pippins666 Have had one since '96. Will have my 3rd renewal in a couple years. Been to 17 countries. Anything else you need to know about me?
@@davidconley6267 just wondering how else you managed to obtain such a huge amount of pig ignorant bigotry...no guessing who you voted for in the last presidential election...or can you surprise me there too?
Of course you are not weak and pampered. You are not weak and pampered because you are too busy licking the bosses arse and begging not to be sacked because your health insurance will go out the window if you get sacked. Your country, the good old US of A, is a business first and foremost and a country a very poor and distant second. Why would anyone in their right mind want to live in a country that charges you an arm and a leg just to get a doctor's appointment? And leave you about £250,000 in debt when you finish your education. And the food, if you can call it that, is so full of sugar, additives and whatever else that it's BANNED in the UK and Europe. So yes you stay in the good old US of A with your guns by your side claiming that we are not weak and pampered.