Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union.
F3: Labour market and lifelong learning.
2920 Luxembourg LUXEMBOURG
The EU has a longstanding commitment to support the principles on secure and adaptable employment, work-life balance and well adapted work environment. This is evidenced by the European employment strategy, the employment guidelines and the European Pillar of Social Rights which express the need for greater adaptability of both enterprises and workers in Europe. Those EU initiatives highlight the need to collect data on the application of new practices in work organisation and working time arrangements and the experiences of workers with those practices and arrangements at European level. In order to monitor the progress in this area, the implementation of the European Union Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) 2019 module on work organisation and working time arrangements is of high importance.
The module is split in three submodules and includes 11 variables.
Submodule 1: Flexibility of working times
The first submodule aims to establish to what degree employed persons, aged 15 years and more, are allowed to have flexible working times in order to combine their work and private life. This can be in a negative or positive way, i.e. with overtime as a consequence, or being more flexible for the family at home.
This submodule includes 5 variables:
Submodule 2: Methods at work
The aim of the second submodule is to assess the degree of autonomy and trust that is given to employees and how far employees can influence the way work is carried out. In addition, it provides information on how common it is to work under time pressure.
This submodule includes 3 variables:
Submodule 3: Place of work
The third submodule targets (i) to find out the main place of work, i.e. where most activities for the main job are carried out, (ii) to investigate the time to get from home to work (main job) and (iii) to collect the frequency of changing location for the main job.
This submodule includes 3 variables:
Detailed information on the relevant methodology of the ad hoc module (including the Commission regulation and explanatory notes) as well as documentation from each participating country (national questionnaires and interviewers instructions) can be found on EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) – ad hoc modules.
The EU-LFS results are produced in accordance with the relevant international classification systems. The main classifications used are ISCO-08 for occupation and ISCED 2011 for level of education. For more details please consult EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - Methodology.
As a general rule the EU-LFS covers all economic sectors.
The full technical definitions adopted by the EU-LFS are available in employ_esms
The main concepts used in this module are as follows:
Freedom to take hours off measures the possibility to take one or two hours off in the main job for personal or family matters within one working day. The terminology ‘at short notice’ consequently refers for this indicator to ‘within one working day’. Please note that for those who reported that they can fully decide on their working time, the question on the possibility to take hours off was not asked and the answer was imputed as ‘very easy’.
Freedom in taking leave measures the possibility to take one or two days of leave within three working days in the main job. For this indicator, the terminology ‘at short notice’ consequently refers to ‘within three working days’. Days off are understood as holidays (excluding for example sick leave).
Frequency of adapting working time to fulfil work tasks, concerns the flexibility the respondent has to show in order to fulfil the work tasks in the main job. The variable does not measure expectations or a perceived pressure at the workplace but concrete behaviour on how often the respondent usually has to adapt his working time to fulfil the work. This can be the consequence of a self-perceived necessity because of the volume of work or tight or changed deadlines. While this be often the case for self-employed, in the case of employees it may also be the consequence of a request from the employer.
Contact during leisure time refers to contact by e.g. phone or e-mail during leisure time in the last two months (in the main job). Leisure time refers to ‘time outside regular working hours’. ‘Being contacted to take direct action’ means that action should be taken before the next working day.
Commuting time concerns the time to get from home to work for the main job (one-way, without any detours). Usual commuting time refers to the most frequently used mode of transport and normal weather conditions.
The Eurobase tables that include this variable provide two different sorts of information:
Other concepts present in the tables:
Size of firm is based on the number of persons working at the local unit and is defined as the total number of persons who work inside the unit (inclusive of working proprietors, partners working regularly in the unit and unpaid family workers), as well as persons who work outside the unit who belong to it and are paid by it (e.g. sales representatives, delivery personnel, repair and maintenance teams). The Eurobase breakdown called “SIZES” is grouped as follows:
Working from home means doing any productive work related to the person's main job at home. In this context, the breakdown “FREQUENC” refers to:
Household composition (HHSTATUS) distributes households according to the number of adults and children. Priority is given to the presence of at least one child aged less than three years old (living with his/her parent(s)). If this is not the case, the presence of a child aged 3-14 years old is verified. This implies that a person in a couple living with one child aged less than three years old and another child aged three up till fourteen years old, is classified as a person in a couple living with at least one child aged less than three years old. For the breakdown, subtotals of households are provided as well, i.e. with or without children, aged 14 years and younger.
Type of employment contract (EMP_CONT) combines working time with duration of the contract and refers only to employees. Technically, the variable is derived from two variables: Full-time/part-time distinction (FTPT) and Permanency of the job (TEMP).
Atypical working time includes:
Degree of urbanisation: aims to classify the place of residence by three types of areas: densely populated (i.e cities), intermediate (i.e. towns and suburbs) and thinly populated areas (rural areas). For reference, please consult classifications.
For more details please consult EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - Methodology.
Persons.
The ad hoc module target population is all people in employment aged 15 years and more.
EU Member States, the United Kingdom, three EFTA Countries (Iceland, Norway and Switzerland) and Turkey.
The majority of countries (18) used the wave approach for the data collection. This resulted in the collection of AHM information from a sample that covered all quarters of the year 2019. However, 13 countries implemented the survey during the second quarter of 2019 and Estonia was the only country that collected ad hoc module data during both the second and fourth quarters of that year.
Not applicable
Number of persons, expressed in thousands and percentages, with only commuting time in minutes as well.
2019
The legal basis for the current module on work organisation and working time arrangements is the Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2384 of 19 December 2017.This means that EU Member States are obliged to carry out the survey and send microdata to Eurostat. In addition, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland (EFTA countries) and Turkey have also implemented the survey.
No mandate for international data sharing.
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
LFS data for ad hoc modules are released after the end of the reference period, once data processing and validation are finished.
Not applicable
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Not applicable
Ad hoc results are presented by a press release, together with three Statistics Explained article providing main results and metadata. Additionally, a series of tables is uploaded on Eurostat Database.
The evaluation report summarizes the main definitions and findings of the 2019 Labour Force Survey ad hoc module. To access the report, please consult EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) – ad hoc modules.
See https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/lfs/data/database.
Eurostat also produces tailor-made tables not available online at the request of users (please refer to http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/help/support).
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Not applicable
For information on the 2019 Labour Force Survey ad hoc module, please consult EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) – ad hoc modules.
Please consult the evaluation report at EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - ad hoc modules.
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
A multiannual ad hoc module programme has been agreed between Eurostat, the National Statistical Institutes and the main users (basically Commission services).
DG Employment and several other Directorates of the Commission use EU-LFS results to monitor and evaluate their policies. Key users also include National Statistical Institutes (NSIs), international organisations, news agencies and researchers, who use EU-LFS data for international or intra-EU comparisons. Finally, LFS data are used by Eurostat e.g. for compiling detailed regional indicators and for making estimates on current education and education levels, higher education and research, as well as estimates of labour input for national accounts.
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
Moreover, AHM data distribution by household composition is not available for Denmark, Finland and Sweden (tables lfso_19fxwt05, lfso_19fxwt09 and lfso_19fxwt29) due to the lack of overlap between AHM and household variables.
Please refer to the ESMS page on 'Employment and unemployment (LFS)' (see link below in section 'related metadata').
For the sample size per country see evaluation report at EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - ad hoc modules.
For non-sampling indicators per country see evaluation report at EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - ad hoc modules.
The deadline for data transmissions to Eurostat was 31 March 2020.
Three countries did not deliver data on time. Initial validation of the data sets was finished in May 2020, with the subsequent revision round finishing in August 2020.
For details on comparability see evaluation report at EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) - ad hoc modules.
Not applicable.
The 2004 LFS ad hoc module also covered this topic.
Published estimates stemming from the LFS are considered fully internally coherent, since arithmetic and accounting identities in the production of LFS datasets are observed.
Information on average interview lengths is available in the evaluation report - see LFS ad hoc modules.
LFS data for ad hoc modules, once released, are usually not revised, unless major errors are identified in the delivered or processed data. Exceptional revisions may happen e.g. after defining new estimates of population from a population census.
Not applicable.
The source of the data is the European Union Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS). The EU-LFS is a rotating random sample survey of persons in private households. It is organised in thirteen modules, covering their demographic background, labour status, employment characteristics of the main job, hours worked, employment characteristics of the second job, time-related underemployment, search for employment, education and training, previous work experience of persons not in employment, situation one year before the survey, main labour status, income, and technical items relating to the interview. An additional so-called ad hoc module can be added to address specific subjects that change from year to year. For details see Council Regulation (EC) No 577/98 of 9 March 1998 on the organisation of a labour force sample survey in the Community (OJ No L 77/3).
Data collection is quarterly or annual.
The data is acquired by interviewing the sampled individuals directly. For the sample design and rotation patterns applied in each country, please consult the EU-LFS (Statistics Explained) webpage.
Prior to the dissemination of national data, LFS results are validated by the Member States and checked for plausibility by Eurostat.
Aggregate figures are calculated by adding up all the national data series. Rates/Ratios are subsequently calculated from the data expressed in absolute values (i.e. number of persons).
No adjustments.
No notes.