Trade union members in France and Germany are becoming conscious of the need to break the law if they are to keep their jobs.
At present it is illegal to ask any worker in France to work more than a 35 hour week, except in special cases determined by political lobbying. Not surprisingly this has led to the closure of low-paid jobs at an accelerating rate with relocation to Eastern Europe the current favourite.
When I was last in Slovakia in May this year, a deal had recently been struck to move a Peugeot factory from France. On my previous visit in 1993, unemployment threatened to hit 80 per cent in some towns.
The power struggle between Finance Minister Nicolas Sarkozy and President Jacques Chirac now encompasses the scrapping of the 35 hour week. Chirac did not veto the measure when the Socialist government passed the law, no doubt under the influence of his then influential leftist political advisor – his daughter.
So now Chirac cannot face anything more than cosmetic reform of a job-destroying law, without looking the cretin that he his. Of course, leaving things as they are makes him look thick-headed, or a “veau” (calf) as we say in France.
So in the marketplace the obvious solution is emerging: factory workers are agreeing to work an extra hour a week without pay. How this is better for social justice than letting people work and get paid for the hours they want beats me, but if it makes them happy…
Of course, in Britain, we do have things almost as stupid (although not quite as damaging). Here, most shops are allowed to open for a maximum of 6 hours on Sundays, and these six hours must be between 10am and 6pm (and I think they must be consecutive).
However, there is nothing preventing shops for opening longer than this: they are just not allowed to sell you anything. And quite a few shops do in fact (for instance) open their doors at 9.30am so that customers can come in and look at and select goods. However, if they want to buy something, they must queue at the till until the store is allowed to legally take their money at 10am.
Well, last time I signed a contact as a temporary worker I had a choice of boxes to tick: Did I wish to be restricted by the EU Social Chapter regulations limiting me to a 48 hour week, or did I wish to opt-out?
Knowing that there was little chance of being offered more than 40 hours work (alas!) I did not hesitate to vote for freedom.