Countries where the discount is applicable

Ordering in your local country you may pay in your currency. If you Order online the payment is in Swiss Franc.

Report II - Measurement of working time - 18th International Conference of Labour Statisticians, Geneva, 24 November - 5 December 2008

The International Labour Organization has long been concerned with the regulation of working time as one aspect which has a direct and measurable impact on the health and well-being of working persons, their level of fatigue and stress (and on that of the people close to them). It also has an important impact on productivity levels and labour costs for establishments, and on the general quality of life in all countries.

Type Report
Date issued 2009
Reference 978-92-2-121621-6 (ISBN)
Format available A4 (iv+58 pp)
Prices Sw. frs. 20; US$20; UK£10; €13
Support medium Paperback
Unit responsible Statistics
Subjects employment, labour market, arrangement of working time, labour statistics, data collecting, ILO meetings
Download English - pdf 503 KB
Other languages Español - [pdf 506 KB] • Français - [pdf 489 KB]
The International Labour Organization has long been concerned with the regulation of working time as one aspect which has a direct and measurable impact on the health and well-being of working persons, their level of fatigue and stress (and on that of the people close to them). It also has an important impact on productivity levels and labour costs for establishments, and on the general quality of life in all countries. Measuring levels and trends of the hours worked in an economy, and for different groups of workers, is therefore important when monitoring working and living conditions as well as when analysing economic developments. The importance of working time is reflected in the preamble to the ILO Constitution and in more than 30 ILO Conventions adopted in this field by the International Labour Conference, the first of which (the Hours of Work (Industry) Convention, 1919 (No. 1) introduced the standard of an eight-hour day and a 48-hour week. These standards cover a wide range of working time issues, such as the regulation and reduction of maximum daily and weekly working time, the regulation of night work, weekly rest, paid annual leave and maternity leave, part-time work, workers with family responsibilities and the measurement of working time.
^ top