Mexico approves bill cutting workweek to 40 hours by 2030

Mexico approves bill cutting workweek to 40 hours by 2030

MEXICO CITY, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Mexico's Congress approved a bill to gradually ‌reduce the workweek from 48 to ‌40 hours, despite significant resistance from unions who ​complained that the reform does not do enough for workers.

Reuters

The Chamber of Deputies approved late the general outline of the ‌bill late on ⁠Tuesday, with the support of 469 lawmakers; none voted against.

The ⁠reform won general approval earlier this month in the Senate, where the ruling Morena ​party holds ​a strong ​majority.

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Opposition lawmakers had expressed ‌concerns about the bill, but after a session that lasted more than 10 hours, they joined Morena and endorsed the reform to gradually reduce the workweek.

After ‌years of back-and-forth between ​lawmakers and private businesses, ​President Claudia ​Sheinbaum finally introduced the proposal ‌in December; it aims to ​gradually implement ​a 40-hour workweek by reducing the workweek by two hours per year ​until 2030, ‌benefiting some 13.4 million workers.

(Reporting by ​Aida Pelaez-Fernandez; Editing by Andrew Heavens ​and Philippa Fletcher)

 

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