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UK – Workers put in £31 billion of free overtime in 2017, study finds

23 February 2018

The amount of free overtime put in by workers in the UK during 2017 was worth over £31 billion, according to a study by the Trades Union Congress.

The study found that approximately five million people were working an average of over seven hours a week without pay. The TUC estimated that the extra work was worth an average of £6,265 per worker. This means that the average person has effectively worked for free so far this year, only starting to be paid from Friday.

"Lots of us are willing to put in a bit of extra time when it's needed, but it's a problem if it happens all the time,” TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said. “So today we're saying to workers, make sure you take a proper lunch break and go home on time. We're asking managers to leave on time too. Good bosses know that a long-hours culture doesn't get good results, and the best way to lead is by example."

The study also showed that while public sector workers make up a quarter of all employees, they account for more than a third of all unpaid overtime.

"Public sector staff regularly work through their breaks and go home late, because they're dedicated to the patients, students and local people who rely on them,”

"But expecting employees to work above and beyond the call of duty, day in day out, is simply not on.

"With staffing shortages and wages failing to rise with the cost of living, morale in our public services is already at rock bottom. Overstretched and under-appreciated staff are at risk of burning out or giving up on a career in the public sector altogether."