Think work ends when you close your laptop? In some places, it does. In others, that laptop never really closes.
Australia protects your evenings and recently made it law.The "Right to Disconnect" legislation passed in 2024 means employees can legally ignore after-hours messages without consequence. Weekends are sacred, and colleagues rarely expect a reply before Monday morning.
New Zealand lives it, not just legislates it.Work-life balance isn't a perk here, it's a baseline expectation. A culture of getting things done within hours rather than grinding through them means most people genuinely switch off after work.
Singapore blurs the line, often invisibly.The boundary exists on paper but dissolves in practice. WhatsApp messages from managers at 10pm are not unusual, and being seen as "responsive" is often tied to career progression. The city moves fast, and the workplace moves with it.
Taiwan is caught between two worlds.Younger generations and multinational companies are pushing hard for boundaries. But in traditional local firms, staying late is still read as dedication, and leaving on time can raise eyebrows. The shift is happening, just not evenly.
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