Employers in Germany have launched a campaign to ban all smoking in the workplace, not just indoors, but also outside, to boost productivity.
Not that German workers would normally be allowed to light a cigarette at the workplace. A ban on smoking as enacted almost everywhere in public places would prevent them from doing so. But while at work, they're often still able to just go outside for smoke in many companies.
The campaigners' main concern is not so much people's health but the time that is wasted and lost for the company - time that employers pay for, unless they strictly require workers to use a time clock for short breaks.
"Smoking breaks cost employers money, and they hinder the working process," the president of the German Association of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (BVMW), Mario Ohoven told the Bild newspaper. He cited Sweden as a country in which many firms had long done away with smoking breaks at work.
His view was echoed by the Federation of Mid-Sized Business Entrepreneurs in Germany (UMW). "Smoking breaks discriminate against non-smokers who keep working, non-smokers are losing out," board member Ursula Frerichs said.
Companies also lose out because they can suffer considerable losses. According to a recent survey by Hamburg University, the non-productive time spent by employees on smoking during working hours cost German companies some 28 million euros ($35.9 million) annually.
The European Commission aims to further tighten anti-smoking legislation in the bloc, eyeing a complete ban at the workplace. But the new directive, which is already in the pipeline, is unlikely to be implemented before 2015.
Portrait of chain smokerBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Sneaking out for a quick smoke soon adds up to lots of free timeCurrently in Germany, smoking breaks are being handled differently by individual companies. Collective bargaining deals in the automobile sector, for instance, allow workers to go for one or two smokes every hour without a reduction in salary. But Germany's Federal Labor Agency, which has 100,000 workers on its payroll, requires staff to use a time clock when going outside for a smoke.


















