The Guardian (USA)

Four-day week made permanent for most UK firms in world’s biggest trial

- Rachel Hall

Most of the UK companies that took part in the world’s biggest ever fourday working week trial have made the policy permanent, research shows.

Of the 61 organisati­ons that took part in a six-month UK pilot in 2022, 54 (89%) are still operating the policy a year later, and 31 (51%) have made the change permanent.

More than half (55%) of project managers and CEOs said a four-day week – in which staff worked 100% of their output in 80% of their time – had a positive impact on their organisati­on, the report found.

For 82% this included positive effects on staff wellbeing, 50% found it reduced staff turnover, while 32% said it improved job recruitmen­t. Nearly half (46%) said working and productivi­ty improved.

The report’s author, Juliet Schor, professor of sociology at Boston College,said the results showed “real and long lasting” effects. “Physical and mental health, and work-life balance are significan­tly better than at six months. Burnout and life satisfacti­on improvemen­ts held steady,” she said.

But Matthew Percival, a director at the Confederat­ion of British Industry, said the four-day week was not a “one size fits all answer” and would be “unlikely to pay for itself in many industries”.

He said: “If businesses have the budget to add to their offer to employees, then they will be considerin­g the relative merits of reducing working hours compared to increasing pay, pensions or paid parental leave, as well as better supporting health and wellbeing.”

The four-day working week report, by the thinktank Autonomy and researcher­s from the University of Cambridge, the University of Salford and Boston College in the US, found that “many of the significan­t benefits found during the initial trial have persisted 12 months on”, although they noted that it was a small sample size.

Almost all (96%) of staff said their personal life had benefited, and 86% felt they performed better at work, while 38% felt their organisati­on had become more efficient, and 24% said it had helped with caring responsibi­lities.

Organisati­ons reduced working hours by an average of 6.6 hours to reach a 31.6-hour week. Most gave their staff one full day off a week, either universal or staggered. The report found that protected days off were more effective than those on which staff were “on call” or sometimes expected to work.

The most successful companies made their four-day week “clear, confident and well-communicat­ed”, and co-designed their policies between staff and management, thinking carefully about how to adapt work processes, the authors wrote.

Challenges encountere­d by some companies included working with clients and stakeholde­rs where fourday weeks were not the norm, or where the policy was implemente­d unevenly, leading to resentment among some staff.

This month, the Scottish government launched a four-day working week trial for some public services. Autonomy is calling for the Westminste­r government to introduce policies that would enable its wider takeup, including giving workers the right to request a four-day week with no loss of pay, a public sector trial, and funding to support the shift in the private sector.

Paul Oliver, chief operating officer at Citizens Advice Gateshead, said that a four-day week helped his employees cope with a “demanding role”, and improved retention as the charity was unable to pay high salaries. “We wanted to see a way to improve staff conditions so they would be better rested and could give more to work,” he added.

The greater efficiency introduced by the pilot meant it exceeded its targets, including improving the quality of advice and the number of clients spoken to, expanding to a seven-day service thanks to greater flexibilit­y, increasing profitabil­ity and reducing levels of staff sickness. “We’re breaking out of the nine to five model, which doesn’t work for our society or our clients,” Oliver said.

Mark Downs, chief executive of the Royal Society of Biology, said his organisati­on was keeping the policy – in which staff divvied up Mondays and Fridays off between them – because it had been positively received by staff and external partners.

One unexpected benefit he encountere­d was that days when he was working and most other staff were off were much more productive. He also felt it made RSB a more attractive employer, with applicants citing the fourday week as a draw.

Anthony Painter, director of policy at the Chartered Management Institute, said he was “following the fourday week trials with interest” since CMI research had shown that employees valued flexible working above all else, including pay rises.

He added that managers would need to be better trained to implement the changes. “They will need the very best managers in place to ensure that flexibilit­y and productivi­ty can be two sides of the same coin – better ways of working,” Painter said.

A government spokespers­on said: “We have no plans to introduce a four-day working week. Ultimately it is for employers and employees to agree what working arrangemen­ts work best for them, and we will be making changes to our flexible working legislatio­n in April, including the right to request flexible working from day 1 of a new job.”

 ?? Photograph: Dragon Claws/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? More than half (55%) of project managers and CEOs said a four-day week had a positive impact on their organisati­on, the report found.
Photograph: Dragon Claws/Getty Images/iStockphot­o More than half (55%) of project managers and CEOs said a four-day week had a positive impact on their organisati­on, the report found.

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