Formerly known as Easy Comes Easy Goes 2.0. I am a Malaysian who loves Hollywood but has never set foot there. My interests = Anything that interests you including Hollywood, Bollywood and Clint Eastwood. Thanks for reading folks. This blog contains 100% true postings, based on established international media reports and reputable trustworthy sources. No lies or fabrications included. Cheers.
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Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Malaysians are the most hardworking people on this planet
Malaysia's biggest selling English language newspaper, The Star reported today, Wednesday, 9th November 2011 that Malaysians are clocking in more hours at work and bringing their office load back home, too.
This means Malaysians on average are the most hardworking people on this planet, and not Americans, British, Japanese or Chinese.
“Some 47% of workers in Malaysia take tasks home to finish at the end of the day for more than three times a week, compared to 43% globally,” statistics in a global survey by workplace provider Regus showed.
Another 15% of Malaysian employees regularly work for more than 11 hours a day, compared to 10% globally.
The survey also showed 32% of Malaysian workers usually worked between nine and 11 hours every day.
Some 12,000 business people in 85 countries participated in the survey.
For the record, Malaysia gained independence in August 31st, 1957 and the current population is 28.3 million people, residing in 13 states. They comprises of Malay, Chinese, Indian and ethnics people in Sabah and Sarawak.
William Willems, regional vice-president for Regus Australia, New Zealand and South-East Asia said the study found “a clear blurring” of the line separating work and home.
“The long-term effects of such over-work could be damaging to both workers' health and overall productivity.
“This is because workers may drive themselves too hard and become disaffected, depressed and even physically ill,” he said.
Willems said businesses that enabled employees to work from locations closer to home and manage their time more independently could offset the stress of a poor work-life balance.
On a global scale, the survey revealed that women were less likely to take work home compared to men, with 32% of women bringing tasks to finish at home more than three times a week compared to 48% of men.
“Workers in smaller companies globally were more likely to take work home than those working in large firms,” the study said.
All the best Malaysia!!
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