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LIVING IN FRANCE

Work, sleep and lunch: What do the French do all day?

According to data from the OECD, French people spend a lot of time eating, drinking and sleeping - here are the stats for how the average French person breaks down their day.

Work, sleep and lunch: What do the French do all day?
A waitress brings food to customers in a restaurant Quimper, western France. (Photo by FRED TANNEAU / AFP)

The OECD collects all sorts of useful data – including a wide ranging international comparison on how 15-64-year-olds around the world prioritise their days – whether that is spending most of their time at work, spending hours every day eating or doing a large amount of voluntary work.

The data on France comes from a 2010 INSEE study titled “Time Use and Couples Decisions Survey”. It is the fifth such survey to be conducted by INSEE since 1966, with the next scheduled to be published in 2025. The OECD has compared this data to similar national surveys carried out in its member countries to create international comparisons for daily activities.

Here’s what they show;

Eating

According to OECD data, the average French person spends two hours and 11 minutes eating and drinking each day. This does not include time spent preparing meals or shopping for food, which is classified as ‘routine work’ under the category of ‘unpaid work’. 

French people spent the most time eating and drinking out of all the OECD countries – Italy came in a narrow second, spending two hours and 5 minutes eating and drinking per day, while the USA came in last place, with Americans spending on average just one hour and one minute per day eating.

READ MORE: Revealed: How your food and drink habits change when you move to France

This might not come as a surprise to French residents, a country where a two-hour lunch break is normal for workers and where the pace of service in restaurants is deliberately leisurely (some would say slow) to prolong the pleasure of a nice meal with friends.

Sleeping

The French are well-rested, according to survey data, getting an average of 8 hours and 33 minutes of sleep per night – right in line with the doctor-recommended seven to eight hours a night.

Japanese people slept the least out of the OECD countries, getting on average one hour less of sleep than French people per night, for a total of seven hours and 28 minutes.

Combined the average French person spends 10 hours and 44 minutes out of the day eating and sleeping – not so bad! 

Working

In total, the survey found that the average French person spent three hours and 24 minutes per day (including weekends) doing all types of paid work or study.

READ MORE: Reader Question: When does the working day start and end for French employees?

Just three hours and 24 minutes a day worth of paid work probably sounds a bit low – but it’s important to note that this survey data covers a wide audience, including young people still studying and not yet employed, as well as unemployed people and stay-at home parents (typically mothers).

The data also includes pensioners as it surveys people aged between 15 and 64. In France the retirement age is 62, although that will gradually be increased to 64 from September 1st after president Emmanuel Macron forced through bitterly contested pension reforms.

This data is from 2010, with the comparison from the OECD having been published in 2015, well before the pension reform came into effect, and also includes people on ‘special regimes’ who were allowed to retire early – for example Metro drivers could retire from 52.

Compared to the average for OECD countries, which was four hours and 29 minutes, France was on the lower end of the spectrum for time spent working per day. This may also be due to the fact that when the data was collected, France’s unemployment rate was lodged around 10 percent, higher than the 7.10 percent as of June 2023.

Japan, Mexico, and South Korea, came out on the higher end of the OECD spectrum working for six hours and three minutes, five hours and 49 minutes, and five hours and 44 minutes respectively.

Italy (two hours and 57 minutes) and Spain (three hours and 22 minutes) worked less than France on average per day, holding up the bottom of the OECD pack.

The United States (four hours and 49 minutes) and the United Kingdom (four hours and 22 minutes) hovered around the average amount of time spent working per day.

Despite coming near last for hours-worked per day, France has a 35-hour week that is in place for people employed full-time. This is not the maximum amount of time a person can work, but is the reference number for calculating overtime, or part-time job hours.

People who benefit from the 35-hour week might work longer (the typical working week for office employees is 40 hours) but they are entitled to time back in lieu – known as RTT days – for every hour they work over that 35-hour mark.

However, it’s important to note that there are quite a lot of exceptions to the rule – certain professions are not covered by it (journalists for example – yes, obviously we checked that) and anyone who is at middle-manager level or above is also not covered. 

Here’s a more detailed look at how the 35-hour week really works

Unpaid labour

When it comes to unpaid work, the average French person spent about three hours and one minute each day doing things like housework, childcare and eldercare.

But in reality, there is still a gender imbalance in place. On average, French women spent three hours and 44 minutes a day providing unpaid labour. In comparison, French men clocked two hours and 15 minutes.

This was particularly pronounced when it came to ‘routine housework’. French men awarded an hour and 37 each day to activities like cleaning, preparing meals, laundry and other household management. In contrast, French women spent two hours and 37 minutes each day on such tasks.

However, Le Figaro reported that French men are starting to pick up the pace. When looking at the evolution between 1974 and 2010, French men spent 39 more minutes on ‘domestic chores’ like cooking, cleaning and caring for children.

Personal care time

The French have been given an unfair reputation of not bathing, but in reality the French spend a decent amount of time on their own personal care: 1 hour and 39 minutes a day on average.

READ MORE: OPINION: Please stop saying that French people smell – we do wash every day

That’s not all spent in the shower, however, this category also includes time spent attending medical appointments, or a visit to the hairdresser, beautician or masseuse as well as travelling to personal care activities. 

In comparison, Americans and Brits spend 58 and 59 minutes on personal care time respectively. 

Sports 

When compared to their European neighbours, the French are not quite as active, spending just 17 minutes a day on sport, even if daily life might involve more walking than it does for people in the United States for instance. The Nordic countries stood out for getting a lot of exercise each day. People in Finland reported spending an average of 39 minutes a day on sport, and Swedes reported 36 minutes.

A 2022 survey by Euronews found that 45 percent of French people said they “never play sports or exercise”, with just eight percent claiming they exercise or play sports regularly. This trend was reversed for people in Finland, with only eight percent responding ‘they never exercise’. 

Leisure

French people do unwind in other ways though – survey respondents estimated that they spend two hours and five minutes each day watching television and another 52 minutes visiting or entertaining friends.

When it comes to other leisure activities, like hobbies, art and music, French people spent on average one hour and 38 minutes a day, the same as Brits. In contrast, Americans spent almost a half hour less than the French and British on leisure 

That being said, recent studies, like one by Vertigo Research in 2022, found that French people are spending more and more of their free time on screens, especially for young people. BFMTV reported that for 15 to 24 year olds, almost 40 percent is eaten up by two activities: social networking and video games. 

Religion and spirituality

When it comes to religious or spiritual activities, the French are not so bothered. The average person is estimated to spend under 15 minutes a week on religious obligations in France, considerably lower than the 26 minutes spent daily in Turkey. 

The journal Europe Now estimates that even though around 60 percent of French citizens still identify as Catholic in most surveys, just 15 percent consider themselves to be ‘practising’ and only 4.5 percent attend weekly mass.

Nevertheless, it is difficult to track religiosity in France, as the government does not collect such data due to the official state policy of secularism (laïcité).

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ELECTIONS

Will Macron resign in case of a French election disaster?

The polling is not looking good for president Emmanuel Macron's party in the snap elections that he called just two weeks ago. So will he resign if it all goes wrong?

Will Macron resign in case of a French election disaster?

On Sunday, June 9th, the French president stunned Europe when he called snap parliamentary elections in France, in the wake of humiliating results for his centrist group in the European elections.

The French president has the power to dissolve parliament and call fresh elections – but this power is rarely used and in recent decades French parliaments have run on fixed terms. Very few people predicted Macron’s move.

But polling for the fresh elections (held over two rounds on June 30th and July 7th) is looking very bad for the president’s centrist Renaissance party – currently trailing third behind Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National and the combined leftist group Nouveau Front Populaire.

Listen to the team from The Local discussing all the election latest in the new episode of the Talking France podcast. Download here or listen on the link below

The election was a gamble for Macron – but if his gamble fails will he resign?

What does the law and the constitution say?

Legally, Macron does not need to resign. In France the presidential and the parliamentary elections are separate – Macron himself was re-elected in 2022 with a five-year mandate (until May 2027).

His party failing to gain a parliamentary majority does not change that – in fact the centrists failed to gain a overall majority in the 2022 parliamentary elections too (although they remained the largest party). Since then, the government has limped on, managing to pass some legislation by using constitutional powers.

The constitution also offers no compulsion or even a suggestion that the president should resign if he fails to form a government.

In fact the current constitution (France has had five) gives a significant amount of power to the president at the expense of parliament – the president has the power to dissolve parliament (as Macron has demonstrated), to set policy on areas including defence and diplomacy and to bypass parliament entirely and force through legislation (through the tool known as Article 49.3). 

In fact there are only three reasons in the constitution that a president would finish their term of office early; resigning, dying in office or being the subject of impeachment proceedings.

Since 1958, only one president has resigned – Charles de Gaulle quit in 1969 after the failure of a referendum that he had backed. He died 18 months later, at the age of 79.  

OK, but is he likely to resign?

He says not. In an open letter to the French people published over the weekend, Macron wrote: “You can trust me to act until May 2027 as your president, protector at every moment of our republic, our values, respectful of pluralism and your choices, at your service and that of the nation.”

He insisted that the coming vote was “neither a presidential election, nor a vote of confidence in the president of the republic” but a response to “a single question: who should govern France?”

So it looks likely that Macron will stay put.

And he wouldn’t be the first French president to continue in office despite his party having failed to win a parliamentary majority – presidents François Mitterand and Jacques Chirac both served part of their term in office in a ‘cohabitation‘ – the term for when the president is forced to appoint an opposition politician as prime minister.

But should he resign?

The choice to call the snap elections was Macron’s decision, it seems he took the decision after discussing it just a few close advisers and it surprised and/or infuriated even senior people in his own party.

If the poll leads to political chaos then, many will blame Macron personally and there will be many people calling for his resignation (although that’s hardly new – Macron démission has been a regular cry from political opponents over the last seven years as he enacted policies that they didn’t like).

Regardless of the morality of dealing with the fallout of your own errors, there is also the practicality – if current polling is to be believed, none of the parties are set to achieve an overall majority and the likely result with be an extremely protracted and messy stalemate with unstable governments, fragile coalitions and caretaker prime ministers. It might make sense to have some stability at the top, even if that figure is extremely personally unpopular.

He may leave the country immediately after the result of the second round, however. Washington is hosting a NATO summit on July 9th-11th and a French president would normally attend that as a representative of a key NATO member. 

You can follow all the latest election news HERE or sign up to receive by email our bi-weekly election breakdown

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