10. Slovenia
 Average Hours Worked: 8.15
Slovenia  rounds out the top 10 in terms of average hours worked among the  population of OECD member states, possibly as a result of the fact that  Slovenians do three hours and 51 minutes of unpaid work each day, 24  minutes more than the OECD average. Slovenia also has the lowest income  inequality in OECD and the ninth – lowest relative income poverty rate  at 7.8 percent of its population. Slovenia registered a big fall in  infant mortality in the last generation and has the second lowest rate  in the OECD of 2.1 per 1,000 live births, just after Luxembourg. But the  country is rated in the highest third of the OECD for perceived  corruption and the lowest third for confidence in national institutions. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD)  released its ‘Society at a Glance’ survey, which investigated the number  of hours the population of its member countries spent in both paid and  unpaid work (defined as working at home or doing volunteer work), as  well as how much time people spent in leisure activities. Lets take a  look at which countries are among the world’s busiest and  hardest-working nations? 09 more countries after the break...
Average Hours Worked: 8.16
According  to the OECD the U.S. is only ranked ninth among the hardest working  nations. However, at $31,000, the U.S. has the second – highest average  household income after taxes and benefits in the OECD, after Luxembourg.  But U.S. income is distributed relatively unequally, with both the  fourth – highest rate of income inequality and relative poverty (17.3  percent of people are poor compared to an OECD average of 11.1 percent)  in the OECD. People in the U.S. have a life expectancy of 77.9 years,  lower than the OECD average of 79.3 years, despite having the highest  public and private spending on health at 16 percent of GDP, considerably  higher than the OECD average of 9 percent.
08. New Zealand

 Average Hours Worked: 8.18
New  Zealand may not be famed for its work ethic, but it actually ranks  quite high. Unpaid work in New Zealand accounts for 43 percent of Gross  Domestic Product (GDP), the third highest in the OECD after Australia  (46 percent) and Portugal (53 percent). Along with Israel, Iceland and  Turkey, New Zealand is one of only four OECD countries with a fertility  rate at 2.14 children per woman, sufficient to replace the population in  the coming generation.
07. China

 Average Hours Worked: 8.24
The  research also included non-OECD member countries such as China, India,  South Africa, and Brazil because all are “enhanced engagement countries”  — which means OECD members have opted to forge a more structured and  coherent partnership with them. The research states that, at less than  an hour, both men and women spend very little time on unpaid work in  China, in comparison with other countries, particularly in terms of  cooking and cleaning. Meanwhile, at 12.29 births per 1,000 of the  population, China has one of the lowest birth rates in the world, equal  to France and the United Kingdom. The average birth rate stands at 1.54  children per woman.
06. Austria

 Average Hours Worked: 8.29
At  nearly 8 1/2 hours of work per day, Austrians have the sixth – highest  total time spent working – both paid and unpaid – in the OECD. (The OECD  average is 8 hours.) Austria also has the fifth – lowest unemployment  rate in the OECD at 4.8 percent – far lower than the average OECD rate  of 8.1 percent. Austria has low income inequality and poverty rates with  around 7.2 percent of the population on relatively low income or  classed as being in poverty in both cases.
05. Estonia

 Average Hours Worked: 8.36
At  8 hours and 36 minutes, Estonians – yes we did say Estonians – have the  fifth – highest total work time in the OECD, well over the OECD average  of 8 hours and 4 minutes. At 3 hours and 52 minutes, Estonians do the  fourth – highest unpaid work time after Turkey, Mexico and Australia,  and well above the OECD average of 3 hours and 28 minutes. However, at  14.1 percent , Estonian unemployment is also the third – highest in the  OECD, six percentage points above the OECD average of 8.1 percent.
04. Canada

 Average Hours Worked: 8.37
Canadians  have the second – highest rate of “positive experiences” in the OECD  after Iceland – feeling well-rested, being treated with respect,  smiling, doing something interesting, and experiencing enjoyment. At the  same time, Canadians have above OECD average “negative experiences,”  such as pain, worry, sadness, stress and depression. Canada has the  sixth highest proportion of its population foreign-born in the OECD at  20 percent, nearly double the OECD average of 11.7 percent.
03. Portugal

 Average Hours Worked: 8.48
While  some people might think that the Portuguese live a relaxed  Mediterranean lifestyle, they in fact rank among some of the hardest –  working in the world. Men do nearly two hours of unpaid work in  Portugal, compared to less than an hour in other OECD countries such as  Korea and Japan. The amount of time devoted to unpaid work accounts for  up to 53 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the country, the  highest proportion of all OECD countries, compared to 19 percent of GDP  in Korea. Meanwhile, 60 percent of the Portuguese population spends time  cooking and cleaning, spending the third largest amount of time on  household chores at 110 minutes per day.
02. Japan

 Average Hours Worked: 9
The second-hardest working nation among OECD member countries will probably come as no surprise to anybody. Japan’s adherence to its work ethic is legendary with company employees often competing to stay at work later than their colleagues to achieve promotion in many corporations, where company loyalty is demanded and where a job for life still means life. Japanese people work an average 9 – hour day while the unemployment at 5.3 percent is well below the OECD average of 8.1 percent.
01. Mexico
The second-hardest working nation among OECD member countries will probably come as no surprise to anybody. Japan’s adherence to its work ethic is legendary with company employees often competing to stay at work later than their colleagues to achieve promotion in many corporations, where company loyalty is demanded and where a job for life still means life. Japanese people work an average 9 – hour day while the unemployment at 5.3 percent is well below the OECD average of 8.1 percent.
01. Mexico

 Average Hours Worked: 9.54
Recently,  Richard Hammond of the TV program “Top Gear” managed to upset the  Mexican Ambassador to the U.K. by suggesting that Mexicans were “lazy,  feckless, flatulent [and] overweight”. The OECD’s research, however, may  go some way to ward redressing the balance by showing that the Mexican  people are in fact the hardest working in the world, working a total of  nearly 10 hours on average every day. They also have the second-highest  level of income inequality and the highest level of relative poverty  among OECD countries.
Via : CNBC

