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by mattmanser
1920 days ago
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The irony of this and the parent comment is the UK regularly come up as a country that the exact same problem happens in. The UK has notoriously low productivity compared to Europe and the US, and longer average work hours than the rest of Europe. These are larger aggregate studies. I wonder why both your experiences of the UK seem so at odds with the observed studies? Is it just the field you're in? Some examples: https://www.tuc.org.uk/news/british-workers-putting-longest-... https://www.businessleader.co.uk/uk-employees-work-the-longe... EDIT: Downvoted for actual studies vs anecdotes. Fabulous. Not only that, these studies have been coming out for years. |
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This has been my woe, and the same can be said about many of my friends and uni acquaintances. I suspect other fields might not have it this badly.
I have found a completely different culture here in the UK, there is so much demand for tech workers, combined with a much better approach towards companies investing in tech - it feels like the worker has that much power, if I'm not happy I can just go get a job somewhere else, probably within a week of quitting. It's a very different dynamic when compared to Portugal: Jobs are scarce and the pay isn't great. Tech is non-innovation driven, you're not there to think about the future, just to fix present issues that are very specific to some random company.
I don't miss Portugal at all when it comes to work.