Workers at companies that tested out a 4-day workweek are happier and more efficient — and firms made more money. One lawmaker says it’s ‘here to stay.’::The latest data shows that workers and companies prosper under a four-day workweek. Rep. Mark Takano wants to make it law.

  • SilentKittend@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The major problem is to overcome the “More work hours = more production” mindset. In subdeveloped worlds, this is so engraved in society that news like that seems “communist propaganda”

    • ashok36@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The problem is separating out the work that does rely on hours worked vs ones that don’t.

      Running a stamping machine? Yeah, your run time is going to be pretty much proportional to your output.

      Working a desk job doing research and generating reports? The better you are at it, the more you can do, and eventually you just outrun the workload. Then you shit twiddling your thumbs for no reason.

      • Taxxor@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        This. It almost only applies to desk jobs. Production workers can’t just work a day less and keep the same output, and if they can’t do it, people like me who are responsible for keeping the production running as part of their job(electrician in my case) also can’t work a day less.

        If companies wanted to do this, they’d have to hire more workers to give everyone a 4 day week. But all this would do is create more costs for the company

  • Jackthelad@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I mean, did this really need testing to find it would work?

    Working fewer days is obviously going to make us happier and, as a result, work better.

    • Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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      1 year ago

      Yeah but the cherry on top is that, for example computer guys&gals will produce better on a 4 day week than on a 5 day week! It’s not like being “on” @80percent makes you produce 90% of what you did when being “on” @100%. It’s giving you a day totally free (same salary, not longer days) and you produce at 105%.

      Work@home have also shown more productivity.

      That’s why we start to wonder why the hell middle management wants us back in the office, at a maximum hours a week.

      They probably are bored all alone, and are devoid of empathy, that’s my take anyways!

  • qooqie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ll believe the “it’s here to stay” shit when I see it. From where I sit I only see managers that want people in cubicles again 5-6 days a week while they can work remotely or hybrid.

    • Dran@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There are some good ones out there. Where I work, they believe me to be irreplaceable. The truth is that I’m sure there are thousands of competent engineers that could replace me, just not for my salary, and certainly not also willing to move to a small town. They don’t want to pay full market rate for what I do, but they convince me to stay on by letting me work my own hours, full-remote, great vacation and benefits, etc. Ive been so productive since leaving office work that the entire organization now has remote work policies.

      They’ve figured out that it’s cheaper to just make your employees not hate their lives and I’m absolutely here for it.

  • outdated_belated@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Up next: companies continue 5-day workweeks anyway, because they’re not even rational in their mandates. (See also: forced RTO).