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      <pubDate>2013-10-02 04:56:02 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Charlene White/ </title>
         <author>charlenewhite</author>
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         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><a href="http://www.webnews.de/1576829/spain-might-put-the-clocks-back-to-boost-the-countrys-economy">http://www.webnews.de/1576829/spain-might-put-the-clocks-back-to-boost-the-countrys-economy</a></p>

<p>Madrid&nbsp;- We're not
actually talking about going back in time here, but Spanish lawmakers proposed
on Thursday switching the country to a more appropriate time zone to make
sleeping and eating times more regular, workers more productive.</p>

<p>Spanish time currently runs one
hour ahead of <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1514383-spain-might-put-the-clocks-back-to-boost-the-country-s-economy">Greenwich
Mean Time</a> (GMT) in winter, and two hours ahead of GMT in summer. This
applies to the whole country with the exception of the Canary Islands out in
the Atlantic ocean.</p>

<p>The country lies on the same
geographical timelines as neighboring Portugal and also the UK, but clocks in
Spain are operating on the same time as France and Germany.</p>

<p>Turns out this is because the
Spanish dictator Francisco Franco's fascist government adopted it to be in line
with Nazi Germany, and it has remained that way ever since.</p>

<p>According to&nbsp;<a href="http://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/636774?__r=406547">Intereconomia</a>&nbsp;(Spanish
language) in 1942, at the beginning of World War II, the United Kingdom and
Portugal decided to change their clocks into the same zone as Western Europe
for military reasons. Franco, of course, did so out of sympathy for Hitler.</p>

<p>However, when the war ended,
the United Kingdom and Portugal returned to their original time zones. Spain
remained where it was and ever since then lives an hour ahead in winter and two
in summer.</p>

<p>A report presented to the
Spanish Parliament on Thursday read:</p>

<p>"The fact that Spain for
more than 71 years has not been in the correct time zone causes us to get up
too early and sleep on average one hour less than the time recommended by the
World Health Organization."</p>

<p>Adding that, "This
negatively affects productivity, causing absences from work, stress, accidents
and school drop-outs."</p>

<p>The report continued by
recommending several measures, including "evaluating the cost and
consequences of returning to the western European time zone which was in force
in Spain before 1942."</p>

<p>According to the report, the
zone discrepancy explains why Spaniards eat, leave work and go to bed later
than their neighbors in surrounding Europe:</p>

<p>"Our timetable is
determined more by the sun than by the clock. We eat at one o'clock in the
afternoon and dine at eight, according to the sun, but the clock says it is
three o'clock and 10 o'clock."</p>

<p>The report&nbsp;figures that by
shifting the time zone, Spain would have "more time for the family, for
training, for personal life and leisure and would avoid wasted time during the workday."</p>

<p>"The results would bring
us into line with Europe in many respects in which we currently differ,
particularly in productivity and competitiveness, in having a balanced family
life and in sharing family duties."</p>

<p>According to&nbsp;the Local,
Spain's only exception to the time zone, the Canary Islands say they want
things to stay as they are.</p>

</p>]]></description>
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