Friday, August 19, 2005

Ahhh...to be French (or at least "vacation" there)

The poor, poor French. One of their "privileges" is threatened as unemployment force many to drop their vacation plans.

August is the month of vacation for the French, who enjoy an average of seven weeks of paid time off annually. But with unemployment at 10 percent and travel costs rising, nearly 40 percent of the French no longer take an extended trip away from home, a trend threatening the summer ritual that has symbolized the good life a la francaise.

Considered a privilege of the elite for the first half of the 20th century, the vacation was "democratized" during the prolonged economic boom that followed World War II. The number of French who took annual vacations rose continuously in the following decades, growing from an estimated 30 percent of the population in 1950 to more than 70 percent in the early 1980s, Froidure said.

After stagnating for about two decades, these numbers appear on the decline. Nearly four out of every 10 French people don't go on vacation at any time of the year — nearly half of them because they can't afford it, according to a 2004 study by the Tourism Ministry. The study defined a vacation as spending four or more nights away from home.

All European nations guarantee employees between four and five weeks of paid vacation a year. The United States and Australia are the only industrialized countries without national minimums on the length of vacations, according to the International Labor Organization.

The French average seven weeks of paid vacation a year — two more than the country's labor laws stipulate.

They work an average of 1,441 hours per year, compared with 1,661 hours for the British, and 1,824 for Americans, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development reports.


Despite the downward trend in vacations, France still all but shuts down in August. In Paris, so many shops, restaurants and pharmacies close that those staying open often put up signs: "We're here in August."

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