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The number of people working excessive hours in the North West has risen by 17 per cent since 2010, according to a new TUC analysis published today (Wednesday).

The number of employees working more than 48 hours per week in the North West has now reached 326,000 – up by 47,000 since 2010 – following more than a decade of decline in long hours working.

Regularly working more than 48 hours per week is linked to a significantly increased risk of developing heart disease, stress, mental illness, strokes and diabetes. Illnesses caused by excessive working time put extra strain on the health service and the benefits system, as well as impacting on co-workers, friends and relatives. Many people are working unpaid overtime and at least a million report that they want to cut their excessive hours.

All areas of the UK have seen an increase in the number of long-hours workers. Yorkshire and the Humber has seen by far the biggest increase with 30 per cent (279,000) more employees working over 48 hours a week in 2015 than they were in 2010.

Workers in Wales (22 per cent increase) and London (21 per cent increase) have seen the next biggest increases in long hours working, followed by the East Midlands (18 per cent increase) and then the North West (17 per cent increase).

UK-wide, those working long hours are still disproportionately men (2,544,000 men compared to 873,000 women in 2015) but the number of women working 48 hour plus weeks has increased by 18 per cent since 2010, compared to a 15 per cent increase in the number of men.

The growth in long hours has impacted differently on various industries. The biggest increases have been in mining and quarrying (64 per cent), agriculture, fishing and forestry (43 per cent), accommodation and food services (36 per cent), health and social work (32 per cent) and education (31 per cent).

The TUC says that the government should reassess its negative view of the EU Working Time Directive, which has been brought into UK law and stipulates a 48 hour working week. Many long hours employees report that they feel pressured to ‘opt-out’ from the 48 hour limit as a condition of employment (individual opt-outs are currently allowed by law). The ‘opt-out’ from the 48 should be phased out over a few years.

Despite a growing workforce, the existing working time rules have helped to reduce long hours from 3.9 million (17 per cent) in Spring 1998 to 3.3 million (13 per cent) in 2007 and 3.0 million (12 per cent) in 2010. But the number has since increased and is back to 3.4 million (13 per cent). There is now a strong sense that the existing rules are too weak to beat the long-hours culture, leaving too many people stuck in ‘Burnout Britain’.

TUC Regional Secretary Lynn Collins said: “Britain’s long hours culture is hitting productivity and putting workers’ health at risk. Working more than 48 hours a week massively increases the risk of strokes, heart disease and diabetes.

“We need stronger rules around excessive working, not an opt-out of the Working Time Directive. David Cameron will not convince people to vote yes in the EU referendum if all he’s offering is ‘Burnout Britain’.”

NOTES TO EDITORS:

UK nations and regions breakdown of number of employees working long-hours (in thousands)

2010

2015

Change

National

2,964

3,418

15%

North East

102

112

10%

North West

279

326

17%

Yorkshire and the Humber

214

279

30%

East Midlands

229

270

18%

West Midlands

226

249

10%

East of England

301

343

14%

London

481

582

21%

South East

492

545

11%

South West

243

275

13%

Wales

107

131

22%

Scotland

230

244

6%

Northern Ireland

58

63

-

Total

2,964

3,418

15%

Source: LFS summer quarters (Industries by ONS classification. Changes smaller than 10,000 are not statistically significant).

Gender breakdown of number of employees working long-hours (in thousands)

2010

2015

Change

Men

2,228

2,544

14%

Women

737

873

18%

Total

2,964

3,418

15%

 

Source: LFS Summer quarters

Industries breakdown of number of employees working long-hours (in thousands)

2010

2015

Change

Agriculture, forestry and fishing

40

57

43%

Mining and quarrying

33

54

64%

Manufacturing

378

411

9%

Electricity, gas, air con supply

18

23

-

Water supply, sewerage, waste

30

29

-

Construction

237

279

18%

Wholesale, retail, repair of vehicles

317

318

0%

Transport and storage

225

259

15%

Accommodation and food services

123

167

36%

Information and communication

129

158

22%

Financial and insurance activities

176

170

-3%

Real estate activities

30

28

-

Prof, scientific, technical activities

211

244

16%

Admin and support services

135

159

18%

Public admin and defence

166

166

0%

Education

376

492

31%

Health and social work

220

291

32%

Arts, entertainment and recreation

47

47

-

Other service activities

53

52

-

Total

2,964

3,418

15%

Source: LFS summer quarters (Industries by ONS classification. Changes smaller than 10,000 are not statistically significant).

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