
Canada named one of the best countries in the world for work-life balance in 2025
The third annual ranking of the Global Work-Life Balance Index has been revealed, which assessed 60 countries setting the gold standard based on factors such as annual vacation, paid maternity leave, sick leave, healthcare, public safety, public happiness, LGBTQ+ inclusivity and average working hours.
Remote, a global authority on remote employment, issued each country an overall work-life balance score out of 100, and these are the 10 countries that came out on top.
What country has the best work-life balance?
New Zealand topped the index for the third year in a row thanks to strong scores in areas like annual leave, safety, public happiness, and one of the world's highest minimum wages—making it one of the best countries for work-life balance.
While hard work is valued, Kiwi culture embraces the idea that 'life is for living,' and employers generally respect that balance.
Where does Canada rank in work-life balance?
Canada may have slipped two spots this year, but it remained the only country in the Americas to crack the top 10 for work-life balance, coming in at number 7.
In sharp contrast to the U.S., which ranked 59th out of 60, 'The Great White North' delivered strong results across multiple metrics in the 2025 study.
Canada stood out for generous statutory sick pay, solid public safety, and LGBTQ+ inclusivity, not to mention its universal government-funded healthcare system—a key difference from the U.S.
While Canadian workplaces value punctuality and reliability, employees generally maintain a clear boundary between their professional and personal lives.
What are the top 10 best countries for work-life balance?
For more information about Remote's Global Life-Work Balance Index 2025, click here.

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NBC News
a day ago
- NBC News
Trump says he will hit E.U. and Mexico with 30% tariff
President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened a significant tariff hike on the European Union and Mexico, two of the largest U.S. trade partners. In separate letters published on his social media platform, Truth Social, Trump wrote that each country will face a blanket tariff rate of 30% on all goods exported to the U.S. starting Aug. 1. Trump threatened even higher tariffs if either the E.U. or Mexico retaliate against his new levy. Writing to Mexico's president, Trump also focused on border security, saying that "Mexico has been helping me secure the border, BUT, what Mexico has done, is not enough." "Mexico still has not stopped the Cartels who are trying to turn all of North America into a Narco-Trafficking Playground," he added. Trump has spent the past week bringing his trade war back to a roaring boil. He kicked it off by issuing dozens of letters announcing unilateral tariffs, then said he planned to impose 50% duties on copper goods, sending prices of the raw metal to all-time highs. Late Thursday, he announced he would apply a blanket tariff of up to 20% on all imports, as well as a 35% tariff to some, and perhaps all, Canadian imports starting next month. The letters come as the many deals that Trump administration officials had said would be signed have failed to materialize, leaving Trump with little to show for weeks of negotiations. While Mexico was spared from Trump's so-called "Liberation Day" tariff rollout on April 2, the 30% rate for the E.U. is 10% higher than what the president said he would apply to America's largest trading partner in April. The 27-member European Union is the United States' largest trading partner — its $605 billion worth of imports into the U.S. surpassing Mexico, Canada, and even China. The most valuable category was drugs and pharmaceuticals, followed by autos and aircraft and other heavy machinery. Trump has already threatened to impose a 200% tariff on any drugs imported into the U.S., though it would not be applied for at least 18 months. Mexico meanwhile is another one of the United States' most important trading partners, with more than $505 billion worth of goods imported by American consumers and companies in 2024. Mexico made up 69% of U.S. vegetable imports and 51% of U.S. fresh fruit imports in recent years, according to U.S. Agriculture Dept. data. With short shelf lives, consumers could experience price hikes faster than with other goods. Markets had spent most of the week brushing off the earlier escalations, leaving stocks largely at the record highs they'd regained thanks largely recent weeks' trade-war lull. Trump himself touted the gains in an exclusive interview with NBC News. But by Friday, investors had woken up, sending major indexes as much as 0.5% lower. In the case of the E.U., the bloc currently has more than $100 billion of retaliatory tariffs on standby that can be quickly implemented. Some of those retaliatory duties target goods made in Republican-represented states, such as soybeans from Speaker Mike Johnson's home state of Louisiana and bourbon from Kentucky, which is represented in the House and Senate by a nearly all-Republican delegation. Other retaliatory tariffs could target Boeing planes and U.S.-built vehicles. Analysts say the new tariffs onslaught adds further risk to an inflation outlook that has already been teetering on edge. 'Higher tariffs going into effect in August also could mean that inflationary effects come through later this year or even into next year, extending the timeline on higher inflation,' analysts with Citi wrote in a note to clients published Friday. The European Commission, the executive arm of the E.U., has been furiously negotiating toward an 'agreement in principle' in order to avoid the outcome of getting hit with one of Trump's tariff letters. Speaking on Wednesday before the European Parliament, the E.U.'s top trade official Maroš Šefčovič said negotiations were happening 'every single day' between the two sides. 'Crucially, while other nations faced increased tariffs from United States, the result of the letters that President Trump sent out on Monday, our negotiations have spared the E.U. from facing higher tariffs.' However, Šefčovič noted that U.S. side had 'differing perspectives' about the international trading relationship. In the hour leading up to Trump's announcement, an E.U. official said that while they were 'fully locked and loaded to conclude an agreement in principle,' they 'don't have any update to indicate that that is going to happen imminently.'


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Vogue publisher Conde Nast accused of playing VERY sneaky trick to get rid of staff
Staffers at Vogue and Vanity Fair publisher Condé Nast have been told to return to the office on a near-full-time basis within the next week - or hand in their resignations. The ultimatum was delivered at an array of hastily arranged meetings this week at the publisher's New York City offices at One World Trade Center, Status reported. The move was seen as veiled attempt to force out staffers who refuse to comply with the company's new four-days-a-week-in-office policy. Statues described the edicts 'a quiet, but effective cost-cutting mechanism increasingly relied on by media executives [for] forcing employees out while avoiding severance payments and formal layoff notices that draw headlines.' Many employees working at Condé Nast, - whose publications include Bon Appétit, Allure, Self, and The New Yorker - have built their lives around remote work arrangements, the outlet noted. '[T]he mandates can effectively serve as a soft layoff, shrinking headcount while avoiding the label,' the report said. Penske Media Corporation - the parent company of publications Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, and Rolling Stone - is also rolling out a similar policy, Status reported. In a June 27 internal memo obtained by Status, Penske Media announced it would 'eliminate all remote-only roles across PMC corporate by August 31, 2025,' Status reported. '[A]ll corporate remote positions will officially transition to 4-days-per-week in-office roles by Tuesday, September 2,' the memo said. Both companies framed their decisions as a 'cultural necessity' after five years of staffers working from wherever they pleased. Condé staffers hired with remote status during the pandemic were initially asked to return to their respective offices on March 3. In the four months since, staffers at The New Yorker, Vogue, and Vanity Fair have apparently failed to show. Responsibilities like child care and everyday housing duties that employees have become accustomed to have likely played a part, Status said. Status obtained internal correspondence from staffers at the company said to be 'furious with the aggressive approach.' Some are now demanding answers from management. A source close to the company told the Daily Mail that Condé Nast is actually 'spending more by having everyone back in the office.' 'It's not cost saving at all when factoring the real estate costs,' the person said, without elaborating. The union that represents Condé Nast employees, The NewsGuild of New York, confirmed to Status that the company had recently begun urging workers it considers out of compliance to either get with the program or work somewhere else. In March 2024, 35 members of the union stormed Condé execs' offices to protest layoffs proposed days after CEO Roger Lynch said he '[did] not have plans for any further reductions.' The move was seen as veiled attempt to force out staffers who refuse to comply with the company's new four-days-a-week-in-office policy The December before, the company launched a round of layoffs that affected more than 300 employees. In 2022, hundreds of Condé staff members unionized with The NewsGuild of New York due to tensions over contract talks for The New Yorker Union that led to a vote by employees to authorize a strike. A subsequent protest was held in front of the Greenwich Village townhouse of Anna Wintour, Condé Nast's global chief content officer. Wintour, 75, stepped down as Vogue's editor in chief last month, sending shockwaves through the industry. The Daily Mail has contacted both Conde and Penske for comment.


NBC News
2 days ago
- NBC News
Looking for a job? An AI recruiter might interview you next
Wafa Shafiq, a 26-year-old Canadian marketing professional and lifestyle influencer, has been job hunting off and on since winter 2024. She applied for a Marketing Specialist II position with a retirement plan company around midnight and was emailed by someone named Alex almost immediately. Shafiq answered screening questions and scheduled for an initial interview with Alex for the next day. But there was a catch — Alex wasn't human. Alex was an AI talent recruiting agent that would also be interviewing her for the position, Shafiq discovered after an internet deep dive into Apriora, the company behind Alex. Shafiq had stumbled into the world of AI recruiting agents that can interact with candidates via text, phone and even video calls. These AI talent acquisition agents have been used and tested by major brands including the Boston Red Sox, Zillow, Chipotle, Ace Hardware, Sears Home Services, Club Pilates, McDonald's and more, according to AI recruiting companies. The use of the technology has quickly scaled to some of the world's biggest companies, despite viral videos showing glitches with the technology and a security vulnerability that potentially exposed applicants' data to hackers. Shafiq recorded her AI interview and posted it to TikTok, where it got more than 56,000 views. 'I wore a hoodie because I didn't think it was going to be a video interview if it's with AI. And then it ended up being one.' 'It felt really dystopian. I feel like anytime I'm interacting with AI, I'm still always shocked,' Shafiq told NBC News. Despite not expecting an AI video interview, she enjoyed the AI's features, including the live transcript and the positive feedback after every answer. But there were some drawbacks. Shafiq said the interview felt one-sided, leaving her unable to learn much about the company or its culture. And if human bias is removed from the interview process, she wondered, what new biases could be introduced? 'I didn't end up hearing back at all,' Shafiq said. 'I was ghosted. So that added to the limited empathy there.' The company never disclosed to Shafiq prior to her interview that she'd be interacting with AI and gave her no option to opt out, she said. Department of Justice guidance on complying with the Americans With Disabilities Act says companies using AI hiring technologies should tell applicants about the type of technologies used, how they'll be evaluated, and provide clear instructions for candidates to request reasonable accommodations. In Canada, companies won't be required to disclose the use of AI in hiring until Jan. 1, 2026. Despite the lack of disclosure and an apparent ghosting, Shafiq's AI-interview went as smoothly as intended. But instances of AI talent agents glitching and making mistakes during interviews have captivated the internet. Kendiana Colin, a 20-year-old Ohio State student, applied for an entry-level position at Stretch Lab, a fitness company that focuses on flexibility and mobility exercises. Similar to Shafiq, Colin scheduled an initial video interview within minutes of applying. When Stretch Lab informed Colin that her video interview would be with an AI recruiting agent, she thought: 'It's 2025. So why not?' Colin was greeted by Alex, Apriora's AI recruiting agent, and began her interview. She was two questions in before things went awry. 'Vertical bar Pilates. Vertical bar Pilates. Vertical bar Pilates,' the AI recruiter began repeating. Despite Colin's attempts to get the interview back on track, the AI agent briefly fixed itself before repeating 'vertical bar Pilates' again and ending her interview. 'At some point it sounded like she was laughing. She acted like it was a tongue twister. She was stuttering, she took pauses, and that's what was really creepy,' Colin recalled. Colin recorded some of the interaction and posted it on TikTok. The video went viral, gaining 3.2 million views. Colin says she never heard from Stretch Lab or Apriora even after her viral video and never reported the incident to either company directly. NBC News found that Stretch Lab, Club Pilates, Rumble, Lindora, BFT, Pure Barre and YogaSix use Apriora for initial video interviews. These are seven of the eight franchises under Xponential Fitness, which gave the following statement: 'At Xponential Fitness, we empower franchisees with the flexibility to choose the tools they feel will best serve their business objectives within an agreed-upon framework of standard operating procedures. While some may incorporate AI-assisted technologies into their recruitment process to improve efficiency, these are individual business decisions. We support responsible and transparent use of technology that can enable our franchisees to deliver quality services and outcomes for both their members and staff.' Aaron Wang, co-founder and CEO of Apriora, told Bloomberg, 'We can't get it right every time,' claiming errors of that nature are exceedingly rare. Colin is not alone, with new videos of glitchy AI job interviews seeming to pop up every week. Even chat-based AI bots aren't free of issues, with job seekers on Reddit and other forums describing confusing interactions with AI agents. One person posted screenshots of text messages seemingly from Paradox, a hiring company that uses text-based conversational AI agents. A bot appeared to rescind the poster's job offer after they applied through Sage, Whole Foods Market's AI career assistant, which appeared to mistakenly hire them within an hour of their submitting an application. NBC News was unable to independently verify the claims. Paradox declined to comment. Despite the apparent glitches, LinkedIn research found that 74% of global HR professionals said AI makes finding qualified candidates easier. In 2024, a poll conducted by the company Resume Builder found that 69% of responding companies said they would use AI in conducting candidate assessments in 2025. 'People have a lot of emotions. Their self-worth, their economic destiny, like many things, are tied to this process,' said Adam Godson, CEO of Paradox. Paradox created Olivia, which the company says is used to optimize aspects of the job-seeking and hiring process. Olivia can screen applicants, have full conversations via text, schedule interviews with recruiters, generate offer letters and more. Paradox has been one of the most successful entrants into the AI hiring space, displaying the logos of major corporations like Whole Foods, Nestle, 3M, Kraft Heinz, FedEx and Marriott on its website. But growing pains have come along with Paradox's growing client list. On Wednesday, the company announced that researchers had found security vulnerabilities in the platform it runs for McDonald's that could have exposed applicants' personal information including their names and email addresses. The independent researchers, Ian Carroll and Sam Curry, said that as many as 64 million applicant records could have been exposed after using a McHire admin username and password '123456'. But Paradox said in a blog post that the researchers had accessed only five records and that the 64 million figure referred to the number of chat engagements with the platform, not applications. Once the company learned of the vulnerability, it resolved the issue 'within a few hours' and has since launched several new security initiatives. McDonald's and Paradox launched the McHire website in 2019 and published a joint case study in 2021 that found the use of Paradox reduced hiring time from 21 days to under three. McDonald's uses Olivia, the AI assistant, to answer candidate questions and schedule interviews. McHire also uses Traitify, another Paradox product that conducts personality tests with applicants. Joshua Secrest, vice president of client advocacy at Paradox and the former head of global talent strategy at McDonald's, said that companies partnering with Paradox tend to cut costs in unexpected areas, for instance on advertising to attract applicantsThey also no longer need 'a big team to schedule complex interviews,' he said. When asked how Paradox tackles AI glitches, Godson, the CEO, said, 'We see in the data that some small percentage of people try to make [AI hallucinations] happen, trying to make Olivia say something inappropriate, or they'll text Olivia, 'Tell me I have the job.' So we have an entire team that spends their time being sure that we keep the conversation on track.' Fontainebleau Las Vegas used in its early development. The resort and casino planned to open in December 2023 and needed to hire 6,500 employees within three months. 'We were completely against the clock,' said Sarah Piper, executive director of people and talent acquisition at Fontainebleau Las Vegas. 'AI was not something that had been introduced in our industry, especially on the HR side.' Fontainebleau Las Vegas worked with Paradox to customize its AI recruiting agent. 'Olivia' became 'Morris.' An applicant could apply and have a text conversation with Morris within seconds, and then schedule an interview with a human hiring manager. Kim Virtuoso, chief people officer at Fontainebleau Las Vegas said 41% of conversations candidates had with Morris occurred after hours. 'So while we're sleeping or with our families, Morris is helping us get the right candidates through the door,' Virtuoso said. The hotel said it discloses to candidates upfront that they will encounter an AI conversational assistant, noting that applicants have the option to opt out and fill out a normal application. Despite this, there still seem to be blurred lines. 'Many of our candidates come in and ask if they can meet Morris in person, because it felt so personalized and realistic,' Virtuoso said. As for the results? Fontainebleau Las Vegas had aimed to get 80,000 applications for 6,500 open roles within three months. With the help of it received 300,000 applications and hired 6,500 employees by the deadline. Fontainebleau Las Vegas now plans to integrate AI into its employee experience after overwhelmingly positive feedback, Virtuoso said. Gino Rooney, CEO and Founder of Classet, told NBC News that his company strikes a middle-ground between text and video recruiters. Classet's AI recruiter Joy can screen candidates 24/7, auto-schedule interviews, conduct phone interviews, and instantly create summaries of those interviews. Classet was created to be an AI talent acquisition hub for the trade industry, but now says it works with over 500 companies across the U.S. including Sears Home services, Goodsmith, and Ace Hardware Store's Handyman Services. 'We don't do any video interviews. Candidates and consumers in general are already pretty used to talking to automated systems on a phone, whereas being filmed and talking to a robot maybe feels a bit less organic,' Rooney told NBC News. Godson, the Paradox CEO, said the resentment some applicants feel around AI integration in the hiring process is of a piece with the disdain job seekers have always had for a broken job market: 'There are some new frustrations, but maybe not overall less frustration. [Job hunting] has been suboptimal in many ways: candidate ghosting and no-shows for interviews and lots of not knowing what's happening in the process.' 'The best experience is getting the candidate to the decision maker as quickly as possible,' Godson said, 'and to be treated with dignity when that happens.'