The Plenary Session of Congress has approved a non-law proposal Sumar to promote the reduction of the working week to 38,5 hours this year without loss of salary, despite VOX voting against the plan and the PP and Junts abstaining, the remaining parties had sufficient majority, with 169 in favour, 33 against, and 142 abstaining.
uncertainty out there and making adjustments to their workforce. does this tell you anything, robert wolf? yeah, i think we are at a fork in the road and a flip in the coin which way it goes. half the counsel have i is hurt by inflation, if not more, and then the other half is nervous about a recession. i m certainly nervous about a long tail inflation. i m not surprised we are having average hour work weeks down because a couple things. sandra: this is the drop, put it on the screen, november 2019, average work week 39 hours. it s gone down, and incremental drops, but may 2022, 38.75, down to 38.5 as of may 2023. obviously a half an hour difference does make when it comes to takehome pay. productivity gains and with wage inflation, employers are saying hey, if we can cut some costs here and there we should, and the other thing you and i have talked about we are not in
plan from childcare offer. the public need a plan from the government to grow the economy, plan from the government to grow the economy, to plan from the government to grow the economy, to halve inflation and reduce economy, to halve inflation and reduce debt. that is their priorities. it is our prime minister s priority too. the honourable lady will know we are a resilient honourable lady will know we are a resilient nation. we have had the fastest resilient nation. we have had the fastest growing cumulative growth in the g7 fastest growing cumulative growth in the 67 for fastest growing cumulative growth in the g7 for the past two years. the imf the g7 for the past two years. the w have the g7 for the past two years. the imf have revised their forecasts up. and we imf have revised their forecasts up. and we avoided a technical recession, which many people said was inescapable. we have got 4 million was inescapable. we have got 4 million people into work. half of
the restaurant and they say eggs are their biggest costs now. lawrence: eggs, the price of meat. all the customers. gas, all of this is impacting these people. there s a new poll out that says 38.5% of american adults say it s difficult to pay their bills. this is just a stream of stream of things that are hitting the biden administration. it is the economy. and if you look at the past election, 52% of americans said they were better off under donald trump. but they didn t like the tone and tenor of things right now. i m not sure it s going to be the same thing for the next election right now when the economy is hitting everyone so hard. joey: yeah, i think the point is people were almost better off immediately after the pandemic than they are now a couple years later. we have graph here april 27th to may 9th of 2022, 22.4 million people were dependent on credit cards. now at 25.1 million.
hospitals and smaller place for rehabilitation, they have all disappeared. there has been no investment into it but increased demand. the team calls the gp to discuss a plan. so she has got an appointment booked in for today but i m not sure what time. it says about a home visit today. obviously got an infection somewhere. with her high temperature, 38.5. they leave antibiotics and either at home. and eva at home. you have to balance on the one hand, the risks to home of perhaps leaving somebody at home or treating them at home and then not may be getting the diagnostic tests or treatment that can be done in the hospital, and on the other hand, the comfort of the patient and their wishes and what they would like and the wishes of their family and they are very complex decisions to make. the nextjob is 20 miles from base, but it s a child. and the air ambulance is already on scene when we get there. we are at an address in wroxham. the crews do a ten hour day and they were about 20 m