Swedes pay close attention to work-life balance. In 2017, Per-Erik Muskos, a politician, suggested that Overtornea, his
Question:
Swedes pay close attention to work-life balance. In 2017, Per-Erik Muskos, a politician, suggested that Overtornea, his small town in northern Sweden with a dwindling population, should provide paid one-hour sex breaks for the town’s approximately 500 employees. Muskos suggested that the one hour of the workweek already set aside for subsidized fitness activities could be devoted instead to sex. The town council rejected the proposal saying, among other things, that the proposal was too much of an intrusion into personal lives. Do you think government policy in the United States should be more committed to encouraging and subsidizing desirable personal activities such as fitness, sex, family time, children’s welfare, and so on? Explain. See Dan Bilefsky and Christina Anderson, “Swedish Town Rejects Plan to Let Workers Take a Break for Sex,” New York Times, May 18, 2017, p. A10 [www.nytimes.com].
Step by Step Answer:
Law Business And Society
ISBN: 9781260247794
13th Edition
Authors: Tony McAdams, Kiren Dosanjh Zucker, Kristofer Neslund, Kari Smoker