Original URL: https://www.theregister.com/2013/09/24/austerity_bites_greece_ends_extra_hols_for_civil_servants_forced_to_use_computers/

Greece ends extra hols for civil servants forced to use hated computers

Six days more of screen'n'keyboard despair

By Lewis Page

Posted in Bootnotes, 24th September 2013 04:58 GMT

In a sign of just how hard the austere financial climate is hitting, it has been reported that the Greek government has been forced to put an end to one of its civil servants' most treasured privileges. We speak, of course, of the Hellenic Sir Humphreys' entitlement to an extra six days a year paid holiday if they are compelled to work with that frightful engine of misery, the computer.

Reuters reports that the long-standing regulation, in which all Greek government workers compelled to use a computer for more than 5 hours a day get an extra day's leave every two months, was axed in an official announcement on Friday.

"It belongs to another era. Today, in times of crisis, we cannot hold on to anachronistic privileges," the newswire quoted minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis as saying. Mitsotakis is the man in charge of making the Greek civil service cheaper and better, a plan being insisted upon by the country's overseas creditors. Ironically it appears that the extra-hols-for-computer-users rule was actually brought in by the administration of Mr Mitsotakis' dad, who won a Greek national election in 1989.

It appears that hapless Greek pen-pushers have suffered many other affronts in the push to make them as productive as Germans and so perhaps straighten out their nation's finances. Apparently they have already lost a bonus they used to receive for turning up to work, and also a handy rule in which unmarried daughters could continue to draw a dead father's pension.

The Reuters report can be read here, though we suspect that not many of our readers will get any special privileges for doing so. ®