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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
No-Vacation Nation
Americans are getting fewer and fewer days off. This lack of paid
vacation, say many experts, doesn’t just translate into less time spent at
the beach. An unhealthy work-life balance affects not only our health and
well-being, but our families and our society as a whole. Here’s what we can do about it.
By John de Graaf |
March 2008 |
America the Merciless
Take a Break — or Be Broken
More Than Fond Memories
The Upside for Business
Vacation Legislation
No Time for Time Off
A Month of Sundays
Challenge the Status Quo
Last February, after delivering a lecture at the
University of Florida, I was dismayed to discover that my flight home from Jacksonville to Seattle was canceled. Not wanting to spend the night in an
airport, I found an inexpensive chain motel nearby. At the reception desk, the
soft-spoken, middle-aged clerk asked how I was. “Not so good,” I replied.
“My flight was just canceled. How are you?” “Well, I’m not so good either,”
she said. “My vacation was just canceled — for the seventh year in a row.”
What’s up with this, I wanted to know. She explained that she’d been working
at the hotel for 12 years, and her contract called for two weeks of paid
vacation a year. For the first five years, she’d been able to take them. But
then the hotel cut staff, and every year since then they’d told her they had no
replacement and couldn’t let her go. Instead, they gave her two extra weeks of
pay. “I can use the money,” she explained with a sigh. “After all, I’m working
as a hotel clerk, and I’m a single mom. But I need the time even more. I’m going
nuts, but I can’t quit this job. I’ve got a son who’s starting college next fall
and no other options.”
She told me she was Native American and used to
spend her two weeks off going to powwows with her friends. It meant a lot to her
— the camaraderie, the cultural identity, the fun of dancing. But now she was
able to attend only an occasional powwow, for just a day.
She said all this
with a certain resignation and considerable inner strength. There were no tears,
and her voice didn’t crack. But I suspect she was aching inside. And I wondered
just how many other workers voice similar complaints in a country that one
report by the Center for Economic Policy Research has called “No-Vacation
Nation.”
America the Merciless
Americans get the shortest vacations in the
industrial world — when they get them at all. A recent Harris poll found that
only 14 percent of Americans were taking the traditional two-week summer
vacation in 2007. Another survey completed by Gallup on behalf of The Conference
Board, a corporate think tank, found that 40 percent of Americans didn’t take
even a single week off as a block in 2006. More and more of us take what
vacation days we have one by one, here and there, and use them to catch up on
the errands for which our ever-increasing work demands leave little time.
Americans may be materially richer than almost anyone else, but we have the
poorest health in the industrial world, despite spending far more per capita
on healthcare than any other country. In 1980, we ranked 11th in the world in
longevity; now we’re 42nd. We are twice as likely as Europeans to suffer from
anxiety and depression. In large part, these deficits are caused by a lack of
time. Overwork means we spend less time with friends and family, and less time
exercising or eating healthily.
Although American workers are promised an
average of about two weeks of vacation a year, according to Expedia.com they
give back about three days, on average, to their employers, mostly because they
feel they’ll be seen as slackers if they take all their time (and therefore
singled out in the next round of layoffs) or because they simply don’t want to
return to an inbox filled with emails.
Of those who do take vacations,
studies show that at least a third take their work with them, a habit made
easier by cell phones, laptops and the Internet. A quarter of American workers
receive no paid time off at all, a situation virtually unheard of in the rest of
the developed world. All other industrial countries — and 137 nations around the
world in all — guarantee, by law, an average of four weeks paid vacation a year.
In every European country, workers receive a minimum of four weeks after the
first year on the job. The average vacation time is closer to six weeks, and in
some countries like Finland and Austria, that’s the minimum.
Americans who
talk with Europeans about this difference in vacation allotments often receive a
common incredulous response: “Are you Americans crazy or what?”
Lesley
McClurg, who is working with me on a PBS documentary about vacations, returned
recently from a bicycle trip in Spain. “The Spanish people on the trip didn’t
even believe me when I said Americans only get about two weeks off,” McClurg
told me. “They thought I was lying.”
Another friend, travel-guru Rick Steves
of PBS fame, told me he’s had to cut back the length of his tours because
Americans seem to have less and less time off. “When I started, we were doing
22-day trips,” Steves says. “Now our average is 13 days, and a lot of people
want one-week tours.”
Vacations, clearly, are not about slacking. Almost
everywhere else in the world, people understand that taking time off from work
results in improved health, family life, productivity, creativity and personal
well-being.
Take a Break — or Be Broken
In his book, Work to Live (Perigree, 2003),
Joe Robinson, a former Los Angeles Times outdoor writer who is now a
life-balance trainer for corporations and government agencies, provides data
from several studies indicating that people who take vacations are less likely
to experience heart attacks or other illnesses than those who don’t. “But it
only starts to work that way when you take at least a two-week block of time,”
says Robinson.
“Men reduce their risk of a heart attack by 30 percent
and women by 50,” he adds, citing data from the ongoing Framingham Heart Study
and a State University of New York at Oswego study. “There seems to be no
positive effect when you just take a day off here and there. It may help you
de-stress a little mentally, but it doesn’t reduce your risk of heart failure.
You need a block of time to do that.”
A 2006 comparison of chronic illness
among people aged 55 and over in the United States and the United Kingdom
confirms Robinson’s conclusions. Despite being among the least healthy people in
time-rich Europe, older residents of the UK are only about half as likely as
their peers in the United States to have chronic diseases associated with age,
such as heart disease, hypertension and diabetes. Their longer vacations and
shorter working hours seem to be the prime reasons, resulting in less stress
than Americans experience, while leaving more time for exercise and especially
for socializing with friends and family.
More Than Fond Memories
The importance of strong relationships in
promoting health is increasingly recognized as a critical issue in public-health
circles. And vacations are some of our biggest opportunities for relationship
building. For example, I still remember traveling with my dad on two-week road
trips or backpacking adventures when I was a kid. The details remain vibrant
after 45 or 50 years.
William Doherty, PhD, a professor of family
social science at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, believes vacations
provide powerful bonding opportunities for parents and children. He says the
time spent together as a family on vacation often is what adults remember most
about their childhood. What Doherty observes was true for me, and I’m sure it
will be true for my son as well.
Of course, there are many other
life-enriching experiences that come from our getaways. Much of my lifelong
concern for the environment, for example, also came from those early family
adventures in the natural world.
Research by Leaf Van Boven, PhD, an
assistant professor of marketing and behavioral science at Cornell University’s
Johnson Graduate School of Management in Ithaca, N.Y., suggests that the kinds
of experiences people have while on vacation contribute more than what material
possessions contribute to their happiness. His advice: “Instead of ˙ buying that
new dress, take a vacation,” he advises.
Indeed, psychologists are
finding little correlation between life satisfaction and increases in the Gross
National Product that come from an emphasis on producing and consuming. On the
other hand, having more time for friends and family consistently improves
people’s subjective sense of well-being.
Psychologist Tim Kasser, PhD, of
Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., has been researching what he calls “time
affluence.” He has compared students’ experiences at points during the semester
when they had plenty of time versus times when they felt rushed and
overburdened. His findings, while preliminary, show significant correlations
between increasing time affluence and life satisfaction, while “time poverty”
correlates powerfully with unhappiness and poorer health outcomes.
The Upside for Business
Vacations actually make workers more productive,
says Robinson, who has encountered a number of companies, including many small
businesses, that have seen profits rise since they initiated three-week
vacations for their workers.
That comes as no surprise to Cornell’s Van
Boven. He finds that vacations often result in positive work outcomes,
especially for people who work primarily with information. “If I take a week’s
vacation and have some creative ideas, that’s of real value to my job,” he
says.
Despite all this, Van Boven doubts that American businesses are
likely to embrace the notion that vacations can be a win-win for workers and
employers. “As a society we are a long way from placing high value on extended
vacations,” he says. “For one thing, workers are afraid to ask for more time
off. No one wants to say they want more vacation. Even if most workers do want
more vacation time, they may think other workers and employers don’t, so they
keep their wishes to themselves.”
The problem can partly be solved “by making
our preferences more well known,” Van Boven adds. And enlightened employers can
eliminate their workers’ fear of taking or requesting time. “If you want to
invest in your employees’ well-being, you can communicate that everyone ought to
take more vacation,” he suggests. “Make your concerns and norms explicit.”
Vacation Legislation
Even though more vacation clearly seems to do good
things for all involved parties, Robinson thinks things will change only when
the United States has a law mandating paid vacations, like every other
industrial country. For several years, he has been seeking to amend the Fair
Labor Standards Act of 1938 to add vacation rights to its minimum wage and
overtime pay requirements.
Most recently, Robinson and the activist
organization I founded, Take Back Your Time (www.timeday.org), have proposed a bill called
The Minimum Leave Protection, Family Bonding and Personal Well-Being Act of
2007. The bill, which Robinson drafted, calls for an annual, federally mandated
three-week paid vacation for all workers.
The idea of significant amounts of
vacation time is hardly a new one for Americans, notes Cindy Aron, a
professor of history at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and
the author of Working at Play: A History of Vacations in the United States
(Oxford University Press, 1999). In 1913, President William Howard Taft
suggested that all workers get two to three months off annually to restore
themselves. Eleanor Roosevelt also championed vacations and argued that they
didn’t need to be expensive to be valuable. She promoted “camping and tramping”
(i.e., backpacking) as ways for even poor Americans to enjoy holidays.
The
struggle for vacation time comes down to a question of values. What is our
economy for, anyway? What is progress for? If what we’re trying to do is
improve our quality of life, then it’s time we acknowledged that vacations
really do matter. It’s time we devoted a little more of our vaunted productivity
to them — even if it means choosing time over stuff.
This shift would be a
welcome relief to millions of stressed-out Americans. And when it comes to
building a healthier country, there may be no better place to start.
John
de Graaf is a documentary filmmaker, coauthor of Affluenza: The All-Consuming
Epidemic (Berrett-Koehler, 2005) and president of Take Back Your Time (www.timeday.org). He is currently working on a
documentary about vacations.
No Time for Time Off
Average number of vacation days for American employees: 14 Average number actually taken: 11 Percentage of Americans with no paid vacations: 23 Percentage of Americans who did not take at least a two-week
vacation in 2007: 86 Percentage of Americans who took
at least a one-week vacation in 2007: 57
(Data courtesy of
Expedia.com, The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Harris Poll and Gallup/The
Conference Board)
A Month of Sundays
Countries that legally guarantee at least 31 paid vacation days (including
mandated paid public holidays), according to the Center for Economic and Policy
Research: Austria: 35 days Portugal: 35 days Denmark: 34 days Finland: 34 days Germany: 34 days Spain: 34 days Italy: 33 days France: 31 days Challenge the Status Quo
Making adequate vacation time possible for many Americans will require policy
change at the national level. Until that happens, here are some helpful ways to
persuade your employer to grant you and your coworkers more time off:
Negotiating a new job contract? Consider asking for additional paid vacation
time. No go? Suggest that you will trade some pay for extra time off. Request
unpaid vacation time, if necessary. Let your employer know that having some time
to live your life matters to you and that you are willing to make tradeoffs to
gain more time.
Work with your employer to ensure that all employees are
cross-trained to help fill in when coworkers are on vacation, as they do in
Europe. Ask that vacations be scheduled in advance and that those schedules be
honored. If you work for a small business, you might suggest that the entire
business shut down for a couple of weeks in summer. Many mom-and-pop restaurants
do this without losing customers.
Talk with your employer about why
vacations matter and why you’ll be even more productive when you return
to work. Refer to studies that indicate employees will be healthier, potentially
reducing healthcare costs (the most significant burden on small businesses).
Suggest that a good vacation policy will also produce less turnover — another
major expense, especially for small businesses.
Share vacation stories with
your coworkers and work together with them to ensure that all of you can have
adequate vacation time without feeling guilty or fearing negative repercussions
from higher-ups.
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No-Vacation Nation
Americans are getting fewer and fewer days off. This lack of paid
vacation, say many experts, doesn’t just translate into less time spent at
the beach. An unhealthy work-life balance affects not only our health and
well-being, but our families and our society as a whole. Here’s what we can do about it.
By John de Graaf | Features, March 2008 |
America the Merciless
Take a Break — or Be Broken
More Than Fond Memories
The Upside for Business
Vacation Legislation
No Time for Time Off
A Month of Sundays
Challenge the Status Quo
Last February, after delivering a lecture at the
University of Florida, I was dismayed to discover that my flight home from Jacksonville to Seattle was canceled. Not wanting to spend the night in an
airport, I found an inexpensive chain motel nearby. At the reception desk, the
soft-spoken, middle-aged clerk asked how I was. “Not so good,” I replied.
“My flight was just canceled. How are you?” “Well, I’m not so good either,”
she said. “My vacation was just canceled — for the seventh year in a row.”
What’s up with this, I wanted to know. She explained that she’d been working
at the hotel for 12 years, and her contract called for two weeks of paid
vacation a year. For the first five years, she’d been able to take them. But
then the hotel cut staff, and every year since then they’d told her they had no
replacement and couldn’t let her go. Instead, they gave her two extra weeks of
pay. “I can use the money,” she explained with a sigh. “After all, I’m working
as a hotel clerk, and I’m a single mom. But I need the time even more. I’m going
nuts, but I can’t quit this job. I’ve got a son who’s starting college next fall
and no other options.”
She told me she was Native American and used to
spend her two weeks off going to powwows with her friends. It meant a lot to her
— the camaraderie, the cultural identity, the fun of dancing. But now she was
able to attend only an occasional powwow, for just a day.
She said all this
with a certain resignation and considerable inner strength. There were no tears,
and her voice didn’t crack. But I suspect she was aching inside. And I wondered
just how many other workers voice similar complaints in a country that one
report by the Center for Economic Policy Research has called “No-Vacation
Nation.”
America the Merciless (Back to Top)
Americans get the shortest vacations in the
industrial world — when they get them at all. A recent Harris poll found that
only 14 percent of Americans were taking the traditional two-week summer
vacation in 2007. Another survey completed by Gallup on behalf of The Conference
Board, a corporate think tank, found that 40 percent of Americans didn’t take
even a single week off as a block in 2006. More and more of us take what
vacation days we have one by one, here and there, and use them to catch up on
the errands for which our ever-increasing work demands leave little time.
Americans may be materially richer than almost anyone else, but we have the
poorest health in the industrial world, despite spending far more per capita
on healthcare than any other country. In 1980, we ranked 11th in the world in
longevity; now we’re 42nd. We are twice as likely as Europeans to suffer from
anxiety and depression. In large part, these deficits are caused by a lack of
time. Overwork means we spend less time with friends and family, and less time
exercising or eating healthily.
Although American workers are promised an
average of about two weeks of vacation a year, according to Expedia.com they
give back about three days, on average, to their employers, mostly because they
feel they’ll be seen as slackers if they take all their time (and therefore
singled out in the next round of layoffs) or because they simply don’t want to
return to an inbox filled with emails.
Of those who do take vacations,
studies show that at least a third take their work with them, a habit made
easier by cell phones, laptops and the Internet. A quarter of American workers
receive no paid time off at all, a situation virtually unheard of in the rest of
the developed world. All other industrial countries — and 137 nations around the
world in all — guarantee, by law, an average of four weeks paid vacation a year.
In every European country, workers receive a minimum of four weeks after the
first year on the job. The average vacation time is closer to six weeks, and in
some countries like Finland and Austria, that’s the minimum.
Americans who
talk with Europeans about this difference in vacation allotments often receive a
common incredulous response: “Are you Americans crazy or what?”
Lesley
McClurg, who is working with me on a PBS documentary about vacations, returned
recently from a bicycle trip in Spain. “The Spanish people on the trip didn’t
even believe me when I said Americans only get about two weeks off,” McClurg
told me. “They thought I was lying.”
Another friend, travel-guru Rick Steves
of PBS fame, told me he’s had to cut back the length of his tours because
Americans seem to have less and less time off. “When I started, we were doing
22-day trips,” Steves says. “Now our average is 13 days, and a lot of people
want one-week tours.”
Vacations, clearly, are not about slacking. Almost
everywhere else in the world, people understand that taking time off from work
results in improved health, family life, productivity, creativity and personal
well-being.
Take a Break — or Be Broken (Back to Top)
In his book, Work to Live (Perigree, 2003),
Joe Robinson, a former Los Angeles Times outdoor writer who is now a
life-balance trainer for corporations and government agencies, provides data
from several studies indicating that people who take vacations are less likely
to experience heart attacks or other illnesses than those who don’t. “But it
only starts to work that way when you take at least a two-week block of time,”
says Robinson.
“Men reduce their risk of a heart attack by 30 percent
and women by 50,” he adds, citing data from the ongoing Framingham Heart Study
and a State University of New York at Oswego study. “There seems to be no
positive effect when you just take a day off here and there. It may help you
de-stress a little mentally, but it doesn’t reduce your risk of heart failure.
You need a block of time to do that.”
A 2006 comparison of chronic illness
among people aged 55 and over in the United States and the United Kingdom
confirms Robinson’s conclusions. Despite being among the least healthy people in
time-rich Europe, older residents of the UK are only about half as likely as
their peers in the United States to have chronic diseases associated with age,
such as heart disease, hypertension and diabetes. Their longer vacations and
shorter working hours seem to be the prime reasons, resulting in less stress
than Americans experience, while leaving more time for exercise and especially
for socializing with friends and family.
More Than Fond Memories (Back to Top)
The importance of strong relationships in
promoting health is increasingly recognized as a critical issue in public-health
circles. And vacations are some of our biggest opportunities for relationship
building. For example, I still remember traveling with my dad on two-week road
trips or backpacking adventures when I was a kid. The details remain vibrant
after 45 or 50 years.
William Doherty, PhD, a professor of family
social science at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, believes vacations
provide powerful bonding opportunities for parents and children. He says the
time spent together as a family on vacation often is what adults remember most
about their childhood. What Doherty observes was true for me, and I’m sure it
will be true for my son as well.
Of course, there are many other
life-enriching experiences that come from our getaways. Much of my lifelong
concern for the environment, for example, also came from those early family
adventures in the natural world.
Research by Leaf Van Boven, PhD, an
assistant professor of marketing and behavioral science at Cornell University’s
Johnson Graduate School of Management in Ithaca, N.Y., suggests that the kinds
of experiences people have while on vacation contribute more than what material
possessions contribute to their happiness. His advice: “Instead of ˙ buying that
new dress, take a vacation,” he advises.
Indeed, psychologists are
finding little correlation between life satisfaction and increases in the Gross
National Product that come from an emphasis on producing and consuming. On the
other hand, having more time for friends and family consistently improves
people’s subjective sense of well-being.
Psychologist Tim Kasser, PhD, of
Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., has been researching what he calls “time
affluence.” He has compared students’ experiences at points during the semester
when they had plenty of time versus times when they felt rushed and
overburdened. His findings, while preliminary, show significant correlations
between increasing time affluence and life satisfaction, while “time poverty”
correlates powerfully with unhappiness and poorer health outcomes.
The Upside for Business (Back to Top)
Vacations actually make workers more productive,
says Robinson, who has encountered a number of companies, including many small
businesses, that have seen profits rise since they initiated three-week
vacations for their workers.
That comes as no surprise to Cornell’s Van
Boven. He finds that vacations often result in positive work outcomes,
especially for people who work primarily with information. “If I take a week’s
vacation and have some creative ideas, that’s of real value to my job,” he
says.
Despite all this, Van Boven doubts that American businesses are
likely to embrace the notion that vacations can be a win-win for workers and
employers. “As a society we are a long way from placing high value on extended
vacations,” he says. “For one thing, workers are afraid to ask for more time
off. No one wants to say they want more vacation. Even if most workers do want
more vacation time, they may think other workers and employers don’t, so they
keep their wishes to themselves.”
The problem can partly be solved “by making
our preferences more well known,” Van Boven adds. And enlightened employers can
eliminate their workers’ fear of taking or requesting time. “If you want to
invest in your employees’ well-being, you can communicate that everyone ought to
take more vacation,” he suggests. “Make your concerns and norms explicit.”
Vacation Legislation (Back to Top)
Even though more vacation clearly seems to do good
things for all involved parties, Robinson thinks things will change only when
the United States has a law mandating paid vacations, like every other
industrial country. For several years, he has been seeking to amend the Fair
Labor Standards Act of 1938 to add vacation rights to its minimum wage and
overtime pay requirements.
Most recently, Robinson and the activist
organization I founded, Take Back Your Time (www.timeday.org), have proposed a bill called
The Minimum Leave Protection, Family Bonding and Personal Well-Being Act of
2007. The bill, which Robinson drafted, calls for an annual, federally mandated
three-week paid vacation for all workers.
The idea of significant amounts of
vacation time is hardly a new one for Americans, notes Cindy Aron, a
professor of history at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and
the author of Working at Play: A History of Vacations in the United States
(Oxford University Press, 1999). In 1913, President William Howard Taft
suggested that all workers get two to three months off annually to restore
themselves. Eleanor Roosevelt also championed vacations and argued that they
didn’t need to be expensive to be valuable. She promoted “camping and tramping”
(i.e., backpacking) as ways for even poor Americans to enjoy holidays.
The
struggle for vacation time comes down to a question of values. What is our
economy for, anyway? What is progress for? If what we’re trying to do is
improve our quality of life, then it’s time we acknowledged that vacations
really do matter. It’s time we devoted a little more of our vaunted productivity
to them — even if it means choosing time over stuff.
This shift would be a
welcome relief to millions of stressed-out Americans. And when it comes to
building a healthier country, there may be no better place to start.
John
de Graaf is a documentary filmmaker, coauthor of Affluenza: The All-Consuming
Epidemic (Berrett-Koehler, 2005) and president of Take Back Your Time (www.timeday.org). He is currently working on a
documentary about vacations.
No Time for Time Off (Back to Top)
Average number of vacation days for American employees: 14 Average number actually taken: 11 Percentage of Americans with no paid vacations: 23 Percentage of Americans who did not take at least a two-week
vacation in 2007: 86 Percentage of Americans who took
at least a one-week vacation in 2007: 57
(Data courtesy of
Expedia.com, The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Harris Poll and Gallup/The
Conference Board)
A Month of Sundays (Back to Top)
Countries that legally guarantee at least 31 paid vacation days (including
mandated paid public holidays), according to the Center for Economic and Policy
Research: Austria: 35 days Portugal: 35 days Denmark: 34 days Finland: 34 days Germany: 34 days Spain: 34 days Italy: 33 days France: 31 days Challenge the Status Quo (Back to Top)
Making adequate vacation time possible for many Americans will require policy
change at the national level. Until that happens, here are some helpful ways to
persuade your employer to grant you and your coworkers more time off:
Negotiating a new job contract? Consider asking for additional paid vacation
time. No go? Suggest that you will trade some pay for extra time off. Request
unpaid vacation time, if necessary. Let your employer know that having some time
to live your life matters to you and that you are willing to make tradeoffs to
gain more time.
Work with your employer to ensure that all employees are
cross-trained to help fill in when coworkers are on vacation, as they do in
Europe. Ask that vacations be scheduled in advance and that those schedules be
honored. If you work for a small business, you might suggest that the entire
business shut down for a couple of weeks in summer. Many mom-and-pop restaurants
do this without losing customers.
Talk with your employer about why
vacations matter and why you’ll be even more productive when you return
to work. Refer to studies that indicate employees will be healthier, potentially
reducing healthcare costs (the most significant burden on small businesses).
Suggest that a good vacation policy will also produce less turnover — another
major expense, especially for small businesses.
Share vacation stories with
your coworkers and work together with them to ensure that all of you can have
adequate vacation time without feeling guilty or fearing negative repercussions
from higher-ups.
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