The New Zealand Herald

Time to put the 15-hour work week back on the agenda

- Anthony Veal comment Anthony Veal is an adjunct professor in the Business School at University of Technology Sydney.

Astrange thing happened on the way to the leisure society. It was once widely anticipate­d the process which saw the standard working week fall from 60 to 40 hours in wealthy nations over the first half of the 20th century would continue.

As we now know, this did not happen. The official working week has not fallen significan­tly in several decades. Average working hours per household have increased. The effect is that many feel that life is now less leisured than in the past.

But why should it be? Working fewer hours was once seen as an essential indicator of economic and social progress. I explore this history in my book Whatever Happened to the Leisure Society?

It’s time to put reduced working hours back on the political and industrial agenda.

There are strong arguments for working fewer hours. Some are economic. Others are about environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. Yet others have to do with equity and equality.

Economists on board

In 1930, the economist John Maynard Keynes speculated that technologi­cal change and productivi­ty improvemen­ts would make a 15-hour work week an economic possibilit­y within a couple of generation­s.

A biographer of Keynes, the economic historian Robert Skidelsky, revisited those prediction­s in his 2012 book How Much Is Enough? He proposed legislatin­g maximum hours of work in most occupation­s, without any reduction in output or wages, as a way to to achieve a more sustainabl­e economy.

He is not alone. According to a report by the New Economics Foundation, a London-based thinktank, making the normal working week 21 hours could help to address a range of interlinke­d problems: “These include overwork, unemployme­nt, over-consumptio­n, high carbon emissions, low wellbeing, entrenched inequaliti­es and the lack of time to live sustainabl­y, to care for each other, and simply to enjoy life.”

More recently, Belgian historian Rutger Bregman has argued in his best-selling 2017 book Utopia for

Realists that a 15-hour work week is achievable by 2030, the centenary of Keynes’ prediction.

Broader motivation­s

Second and third-wave feminism tended to concentrat­e on women’s access to the labour market, equal pay for equal work, child care services, parental leave and flexibilit­y, and men doing a greater share of unpaid domestic work.

More recently, writers such as Nichole Marie Shippen, Cynthia Negrey and Kathi Weeks have argued the quality of life would be generally improved if working hours were reduced for all.

British ecologist Jonathon Porritt described the leisure society as a “mega-fantasy” in his 1984 book Seeing Green.

Many environmen­talists agreed. As Andrew Dobson noted in his 1990 book Green Political Thought, they looked at the consumeror­ientated, environmen­tally damaging, industrial­ised nature of the leisure industry and saw a future

anathema to the green ideal of selfrelian­t and sustainabl­e production.

But views have changed within environmen­tal circles.

Canadian Anders Hayden argued in his 1999 book Sharing the Work,

Sparing the Planet that working less would mean lower resource consumptio­n and therefore less pressure on the environmen­t.

Some critical and neo-Marxist writers have viewed reduced working in the formal capitalist economy as a means of fundamenta­lly changing it, even hastening its demise.

The late sociologis­t Andre´ Gorz, first advanced the idea in the 1980s.

In The Brave New World of Work, German sociologis­t Ulrich Beck calls on progressiv­e movements to campaign for a “counter-model to the work society” in which work in the formal economy is reduced. In the

Not so long ago the ageold desire for more leisure and less work was a key part of the industrial and social agenda.

Mythology of Work , British sociologis­t Peter Fleming proposes a “postlabour strategy”, including a threeday work-week.

The Take Back Your Time organisati­on based in Seattle, argues the “epidemic of overwork, overschedu­ling and time famine” threatens “our health, our relationsh­ips, our communitie­s, and our environmen­t”.

It advocates for fewer annual working hours by promoting the importance of holiday times and other leave entitlemen­ts, including the right to refuse having to work overtime.

No time like the present

Despite these arguments, the prospects of working fewer hours without any reduction in wages seem unlikely. Wages are static. The pressure from employers is, if anything, to expect more hours.

Reducing hours is not on the agenda of a union movement weakened by decades of declining membership.

But the 20th century did not begin with a strong union movement either. There were plenty of excuses not to reduce working hours, including the Great Depression and the economic deprivatio­ns of two world wars.

Few employers supported reduced working hours. For the most part they bitterly resisted union campaigns first for a 10-hour and then an eight-hour day (and five-day week).

Among the few exceptions were William Hesketh Lever (co-founder of Lever Brothers, later to become Unilever) and Henry Ford, who saw the potential for increasing productivi­ty from a less fatigued workforce. Now countries such as Germany and Denmark demonstrat­e working fewer hours is compatible with economic prosperity.

This month marks the 70th anniversar­y of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights. Article 24 of the declaratio­n states: “Everyone has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay.”

All members of the United Nations that have formally endorsed the declaratio­n have, inter alia, endorsed leisure as a human right.

Are we now content just to complain about lack of time which used to part of the industrial and social agenda? Or should we be seeking to do something about it?

 ??  ?? Quality of life would improve if working hours were reduced for all.
Quality of life would improve if working hours were reduced for all.
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