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Eurostat Data Shows More Than 20% Of Europeans Work Weekends

Recent data from Eurostat, analysed by Euronews, showed that 21.3% of employees across Europe regularly work during weekends, highlighting significant regional differences in labour patterns across the continent.

Regional Variations In Weekend Employment

Weekend work remains most common across parts of the Balkans and Mediterranean region, particularly in economies strongly connected to tourism, hospitality, retail and services. Greece recorded the highest share, with 41% of workers regularly employed during weekends. High levels were also reported in Bosnia and Herzegovina at 33%, while Malta, Cyprus and North Macedonia each reported figures close to 32%.

Limited Weekend Work In Northern And Eastern Europe

By comparison, significantly lower levels of weekend employment were recorded across Northern and Eastern Europe, reflecting different labour market structures and sectoral priorities. Lithuania reported the lowest percentage, with only 4% of workers employed during weekends, followed by Hungary at 7% and Poland at 7.5%.

The figures underline how working patterns and work-life balance continue to vary considerably across European economies.

Keve Welcomes New Cyprus Business Development Organisation

The Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Keve) has welcomed Parliament’s unanimous approval of legislation establishing the Cyprus Business Development Organisation, describing it as a major step toward improving access to finance for small and medium-sized enterprises, startups and self-employed professionals.

Expanding Access To Finance

The legislation creates a new public body aimed at addressing financing gaps by supporting businesses that struggle to secure funding through traditional channels.

According to Keve, the initiative could strengthen entrepreneurship, boost competitiveness and support Cyprus’ green and digital transition. The chamber has long argued that SMEs rely too heavily on bank financing, limiting investment, expansion and innovation.

Keve Calls For Swift Implementation

Keve said it helped shape the legislation through the consultation process and called for the organisation to become operational as quickly as possible. It also pledged to continue working with the Finance Ministry and the organisation’s management to support implementation.

How The Organisation Will Operate

Approved by Parliament on Tuesday, the legislation establishes Cyprus’ national business development body under the supervision of the Finance Minister, while the Central Bank of Cyprus will oversee anti-money laundering compliance.

The organisation will design financing programmes, provide loans and conduct studies to identify weaknesses in the financing market.

Cyprus will provide €60 million in initial capital. Over time, the body will also be able to raise funding from European and international institutions and benefit from state guarantees linked to approved strategic priorities.

Recovery Plan Milestone

Creation of the organisation is one of the final milestones under Cyprus’ Recovery and Resilience Plan and is required for the country to receive the plan’s ninth and final payment. Appointment of the board of directors remains the last outstanding step.

Before approving the bill, the Finance Ministry revised the draft following consultations with MPs and stakeholders. The changes removed provisions allowing the organisation to establish companies and narrowed the list of eligible beneficiaries by excluding small mid-cap companies.

Lawmakers also strengthened governance rules by introducing stricter board suitability requirements, conflict-of-interest safeguards, enhanced reporting obligations and borrowing limits. A seven-member board appointed by the Cabinet will oversee the organisation, while a transitional board will serve for two years until it becomes fully operational.

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