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Tourism businesses, however, credit the holidays with turning around local economies across Argentina. More than 9.5 million people traveled during the year's first seven long weekends, spending $1.6 billion and increasing the GDP by 7 percentage points, according to the Tourism Ministry, which estimates that 1.2 million of the country's 40 million people directly owe their jobs to tourism. "Tourism is a key socioeconomic measure for the country," said Oscar Ghezzi, president of the Argentina Tourism Chamber. "It's an important generator of excellent jobs, and also profits. It's an activity that spills over and mobilizes all the economies, from big cities to small towns." But does all this time off slow down the overall economy? Could Argentina's abundance of holiday joy push businesses to invest in other countries instead? Not necessarily, because another key factor is how many vacation days governments require employers to provide. Argentina trails many other nations by insisting on just 14 days for beginning employees. Together with the 19 holidays, it means Argentine employers have to provide at least 33 days off a year, the same as Colombia, which requires a minimum of 15 days' vacation. France, Austria, Greece and most Nordic countries require 25 days paid vacation, which together with national holidays makes for a world-leading 38 days off in Austria, the Mercer survey found. Venezuela leads Latin America with a total of 36 paid days off, while Morocco and Malaysia lead Africa and Asia with 32. "The numbers of working days in Argentina are comparable with the rest of the region ... while Argentina has a high number of holidays, it requires fewer vacation days than other countries," said Laura Roldan, who directs health and benefits research for Mercer Argentina. "From the business perspective this isn't a big deal. Yes, it's an additional cost, but it's something manageable."
China has a reputation for difficult working conditions, yet requires employers to pay for 11 national holidays and 10 vacation days, a total of 21, Mercer found. The United States doesn't legally require employers to provide any vacation pay at all. Argentina's congress overwhelmingly approved the latest holiday, but when de Graaf drafted a bill introduced in the 2009 U.S. Congress that would have required companies with 50 employees or more to provide just one week's paid vacation, "you would have thought we were demanding the end of Western Civilization," he said. Argentines and their neighbors seem to recognize the upside of encouraging workers to have lives outside the office, he said. "The Latin Americans generally really do appreciate their holidays and time."
[Associated
Press;
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