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peterzylstramoore
John de Graaf
http://www.utne.com/Politics/Thirty-Hour-Workweek-John-de-Graaf.aspx

Pollsters find time stress a constant complaint among Americans. Until the current recession, Americans were working some of the longest hours in the industrial world.

Conservatives say this is all voluntary: American just like to work a lot. But Gallup’s daily survey finds them 20 percent happier on weekends than on workdays—what a surprise! And when Americans rank the pleasure their daily activities bring, working ends up second from the bottom (socializing after work is second from the top!), more pleasurable only than that mother of all downers, the morning commute.

By contrast, the Netherlands boasts the world’s shortest working hours. Dutch workers put in 400 fewer annual hours on the job than American workers do. And yet, the Dutch economy has been very productive. Unemployment (at 5.8 percent) is much lower than in the United States, while the Netherlands boasts a positive trade balance and strong personal savings. A Gallup survey ranks the Dutch third in the world in life satisfaction, behind only the Danes and Finns, and well ahead of Americans.

The Dutch have been reducing time on the job through work-sharing policies since the 1982 Wassenaar Agreement, when labor unions agreed to modify wage demands in return for more time. Their Working Hours Adjustment Act (2000) require that employers allow workers to cut their hours to part-time while keeping their jobs, hourly pay, health care, and pro-rated benefits.

Anmarie Widener, a health researcher and part-time instructor at Georgetown University, was impressed by the Dutch devotion to time for family and recreation she witnessed while getting her Ph.D. in the Netherlands. Her dissertation compares life satisfaction among Dutch and American parents. Not surprisingly, she says, “My polling showed that in almost every area of life, Dutch parents are substantially more satisfied than their American counterparts.” And so are their children. A 2007 UNICEF study ranked children’s welfare in the Netherlands as the highest in the world. By contrast, the United States was twenty of twenty-one wealthy countries studied, barely edging out the United Kingdom.

Work sharing may be all the more important in times like the present. Economist Dean Baker argues that any further economic stimuli should include Kurzarbeit, or “short work,” a German policy that encourages employers to reduce hours rather than lay workers off when times are tight. Instead of cutting 20 percent of the workforce, a German company might reduce each worker’s load by a day. Unemployment benefits kick in for the reduced work time, so workers earn roughly 90 percent of their former incomes for 80 percent of the work.

Other countries have followed suit—the French believe in “working less so all can work.”

Here in the United States, a bill sponsored by Senator Jack Reed, Democrat of Rhode Island, and Representative Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut, would allow federal unemployment benefits to be used to top up salaries of reduced-hour workers in the United States. When the bill was discussed in Barney Frank’s House Financial Services Committee, not only did Dean Baker testify in favor but so did Kevin Hassett, an economist with the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

Hassett pointed out that even though the Germans’ economy tanked like ours did in 2008, their unemployment rate hasn’t risen—thanks to Kurzarbeit. The law allows companies to retain workers instead of having to rehire later, he said. It’s good for them, good for the workers, and doesn’t really cost any more than traditional unemployment payments. It’s a win, win, win. Nonetheless, not a single Republican has supported the bill and not all Democrats do either, so it remains in limbo.

Shorter working hours—the roses of “Bread and Roses” fame—are part of a long and progressive American tradition. A famous Dorothea Lange photo from 1937 shows a National Association of Manufacturers billboard on a hardware store. It reads: “World’s Shortest Working Hours—There’s No Way Like the American Way!” A bill passed the U.S. Senate in 1933 that would have made the official workweek only thirty hours long. Presidents from FDR to Richard Nixon called for reducing working hours.

In our time, feminist and women’s groups, including MomsRising.org and the National Partnership for Women and Families, have led the way in promoting work-life balance policies, demanding paid family leave, paid sick days, and flexible hours. Congressman Alan Grayson of Florida has introduced a bill calling for mandatory paid vacations, guaranteed by law in almost every country. The United States joins Burma and a handful of others that don’t offer this basic benefit.

As Juliet Schor makes clear in her new book, Plenitude: the New Economics of True Wealth, shorter work time also makes environmental sense. Planetary restraints and climate change require us to reduce our consumption of resources. Demands for quick extraction of resources lead to catastrophes like the oil volcano beneath the Gulf of Mexico.

As productivity increases, we seem faced with a choice between environmental disaster or massive unemployment. Unless, of course, we slow down by reducing working hours and sharing the work. Half a century of economic growth has not increased our happiness. More free time might well do so. It will certainly improve our health.

Americans will exercise more, sleep more, garden more, volunteer more, spend more time with friends and family, and drive less. We need full employment, but not by returning to the unhealthy overwork of recent decades As Derek Bok puts it in his new book, The Politics of Happiness:

“If it turns out to be true that rising incomes have failed to make Americans happier, as much of the recent research suggests, what is the point of working such long hours and risking environmental disaster in order to keep on doubling and redoubling our gross domestic product?”

Progressives would do well to advocate reduced working hours instead of demanding unsustainable growth. Suzy Ross, who teaches at San Jose State University, told me that when her co-workers found that they would have to take furlough days and commensurate pay cuts in response to California’s budget crisis, they all responded in anger. Now, she says, they appreciate the extra two days off each month, and few want to give them up, though they could use the money.

Reducing work hours and sharing available work is essential for our families, health, economic security, and the environment.

It’s time to get on with it.

image from..
http://20somethingfinance.com/american-hours-worked-productivity-vacation/
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47 comments // Less Work, More Life

  • WakeUpPeople
    • 0
      WakeUpPeople  
    • I saw another study along the same vein as this. The USA was closer to Korea than any other industrialized nation when it came to overworking the population.

    • 1 year ago
  • good_stuff
    • 0
      good_stuff  
    • I've said it before and I'll say it again. What we need to do is make it mandatory that everyone who works over 40 hrs per week gets paid time and a half or more.

      Unpaid or normally paid overtime is what allows companies to not hire, but still keep up with demand in lean times. CEO's refer to it as "streamlining operations".

    • 1 year ago
  • mitekillem
    • +4
      mitekillem  
    • Socialism is evil.
      I mean, look at how many days off they have, and how much more free time they get to spend with their families. ...not to mention Norway has one of the highest median incomes at $53,400.
      The good 'ol US rings in at $45,600.

      They also have public health care, aka Socialized medicine.
      So, higher incomes, more time off, and free health care.
      How is our system better?
      I think I'll choose Evil. Evil sounds like it's better for people (but worse for insurance corporations).

    • 1 year ago
  • artemis6
  • jubal
    • +1
      jubal  
    • Stories like this demonstrate that America still has a slave labor force mentality. And dumb Americans are all too eager to comply with this way of life.

    • 1 year ago
  • damush
  • simplecj
    • +2
      simplecj  
    • I get no paid holidays, but I do accrue 5.5hrs paid time off every two weeks. That works out to just short of 18 days a year and I'm fortunate to get that. I'm also an engineer getting paid half my proper wage. I'll be quitting to move to a metro area for better pay soon, but I still have this sick feeling in my gut that no matter where I am I'll be a slave to my job. Only hope I have is to make enough money to enjoy the days I have off.

      After college me and my wife have about $70k in debt, and our combined income working fulltime last year was only $46k. She's a year round math and science teacher and makes $26k (no paid holiday or paid time off) I'm a planning engineer for an aerospace manufacturer and only made $20k.

      I feel like I have no life. When I do get days off I'm either sick or really can't afford to do much but stay home and catch up on cleaning and maintenance. My only hope is that my next employer has decent wages and PTO so I can enjoy those wages while working on paying off my debts.

    • 1 year ago
  • hanzdogy
    • 0
      hanzdogy  
    • simplecj:

      Dude, what state is your wife a teacher in? Colorado is one of the lowest funded states for education, and teachers start out at 28k. I hear you about the debt though. My wife and I also have a lot of debt that my teacher salary isn't doing a good job of paying off.

    • 1 year ago
  • simplecj
  • dudefromtherock
  • extracrazykiwi2008
  • UtopianSky
    • +1
      UtopianSky  
    • We had paid annual leave, no paid holidays. On the surface it seems beter- we can choose what days to take off when we want.

      In reality, most people who do not have families just worked all year long, and got an extra check for the unused hours.

    • 1 year ago
  • crosiss
    • +2
      crosiss  
    • the thing that makes me sick is all the old and young i still see working at publix,wallmart,homedepot. young should be in school old should be retired but their not they have to work to surive. lets stop this insanity and look at bringing forth the resource based economy.

    • 1 year ago
  • Pedroptz
    • +1
      Pedroptz  
    • I don't know how the dutch do it, they work less, they are happier, more educated, more tolerant, a true model nation

    • 1 year ago
  • coolplanet
  • dudefromtherock
  • MizPiz
  • xiamenkevin
    • +7
      xiamenkevin  
    • Image
    • I work for 8 hours daily for the working days as well. I have already got used to this kind of life. Living quality is very important, as life is just a process. No one can live forever. I will try to improve my working efficiency as well as possible, and reduce the working time, so as to have more leisure time to enjoy the life. I am a young painter in China. My website is: http://www.oilpaintingcentre.com Look forward to making friends with people who love painting as well.

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
  • Vierotchka
  • xiamenkevin
  • xiamenkevin
  • Vierotchka
    • +2
      Vierotchka  
    • xiamenkevin:

      Sure, why not - but you should never post your email in public on the internet like this, because you might well receive a lot of spam and unwanted emails. I suggest you edit your comment and remove your email address - you can always communicate with people using the private messaging function - click on any person's name and you will get to their profile page - there, you can click on "send a message" - it will open your message box and you'll find a window for sending a message. Take care. :)

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
  • oppressed1
  • dudefromtherock
  • dudefromtherock
    • +10
      dudefromtherock  
    • I get 8 paid holidays a year and 6 weeks of Annual Leave...I have also accumulated 2 additional months of Annual Leave. Not including paid sick leave, Family Leave, etc. God Bless Canada ;P

    • 1 year ago
  • Stoneyroad
  • dudefromtherock
  • ThatCrazyLibertarian
  • dudefromtherock
  • FtheBULLSHT
    • +3
      FtheBULLSHT  
    • I wonder what percentage of employed Americans work for large corporations compared to percentage of Europeans working for large corporations.

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
  • controlusplease
  • dudefromtherock
  • artemis6
    • +4
      artemis6  
    • People with spare time contribute to the community , so the whole community gets stronger and more able to whether hardship .

    • 1 year ago
  • Mayeffie
  • artemis6
  • Mayeffie
    • +8
      Mayeffie  
    • American workers get no respect! That's why I quit my job cold turkey this past May. I Didn't plan to quit but I was not gonna take it anymore.

      Corporate America is a blood suckin, greedy...

    • 1 year ago
  • Swisher
  • dudefromtherock
  • Nephwrack
  • galwayman
    • 0
      galwayman  
    • Fine if people can afford to work less however most can't! The cost of living is skyrocketing and unless the elite who control all business will pay more for less work,and that will never happen,most need to work two jobs just to be comfortable!

    • 1 year ago
  • treewolf39
    • 0
      treewolf39  
    • galwayman:

      Or................redefine comfortable. Once you lose health insurance care the cradle to grave shock moves in. Living in a city costs more; having to pay for all service.

    • 1 year ago
  • Swisher
  • good_stuff
    • 0
      good_stuff  
    • galwayman:

      That is exactly it... if less people are willing to work 12 hr days with minimal vacation time, then the amount of labor hours available as a nation goes down. Supply is inversely proportional to demand, so if supply of labor is reduced the value of that labor goes up and everybody gets paid more for the same work.

      The only one who doesn't benifit is the coorporations. Hopefully less money means they won't feel as though they need to put thier 2 cents (or 2 billion) into the people's political campaigns.

    • 1 year ago
  • kennymotown
    • +8
      kennymotown  
    • Looks to me as if the best country's for citizens appear to be those that we here in the United States call Democratic Socialist country's!

    • 1 year ago
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