Current:Home > ContactDozens of U.K. companies will keep the 4-day workweek after a pilot program ends -Momentum Wealth Path
Dozens of U.K. companies will keep the 4-day workweek after a pilot program ends
View
Date:2025-04-27 15:16:01
Is it finally time for the four-day workweek?
Results from a new pilot program at dozens of employers in the United Kingdom showed major benefits to workers' health and productivity when their hours were reduced — and a vast majority of firms plan to stick with the condensed schedule.
Advocates say the results help validate the idea that it's possible for companies to shorten the workweek to 32 hours with no reduction in pay while maintaining previous levels of work output.
"We feel really encouraged by the results, which showed the many ways companies were turning the four-day week from a dream into a realistic policy, with multiple benefits," David Frayne, a research associate at University of Cambridge who worked on the trial, said in a statement.
"We think there is a lot here that ought to motivate other companies and industries to give it a try," Frayne added.
The pilot program was a collaboration between the nonprofit 4 Day Week Global, the 4 Day Week Campaign in the United Kingdom and the think tank Autonomy.
It included roughly 2,900 workers at 61 companies — from nonprofits, manufacturers and finance firms to even a fish-and-chip shop — and ran from June to December of last year.
Workers and companies alike reported improvements
While more than half of companies reported switching all their workers to a four-day workweek, employers were only required to give their staff a "meaningful" reduction in hours, which could also include five-day weeks with shorter work days or schedules that varied in length from week to week but averaged out to 32 hours per week over the course of a year.
Largely, workers themselves approved. Employees reported less work-related stress, lower rates of burnout and higher job satisfaction. A majority of employees reported working at a faster pace.
There were physical and mental health benefits — 46% of employees said they were less fatigued — and three in five respondents said it was easier to balance work with care responsibilities at home.
"Results are largely steady across workplaces of varying sizes, demonstrating this is an innovation which works for many types of organisations," said Juliet Schor, a Boston College professor and the project's lead researcher.
How employees used their spare time differed by the type of work they performed, researchers found. Those who worked in nonprofits and professional services spent more time exercising, while those in construction and manufacturing reported saw the largest declines in burnout and sleep problems, Schor said.
The results also appeared positive from the corporate perspective.
Revenue increased by an average of 1.4% over the study period, according to data from 23 organizations that provided it. Absenteeism fell, and people were less likely to quit during the trial, even though it took place during what's been dubbed the Great Resignation, the authors noted.
Of the 61 companies that took part in the trial, 56 said they would continue offering the four-day workweek for now. Eighteen said they planned to shorten the workweek permanently.
Among them is Tyler Grange, an environmental consulting firm based in England. Managing director Simon Ursell told NPR that the firm invested in technology and stopped doing the "day-to-day rubbish" of certain administrative tasks in order to squeeze the required weekly workload into four days instead of five.
"If you give people an incentive to do something — like a really cool incentive, and it's a money-can't-buy incentive, giving them a whole day a week for the same pay to do what they want to do — that really focuses the mind," he said.
Ursell agreed that a strict four-day workweek may not fit every company's needs, but he urged managers to rethink what is necessary to get the work done.
"I think the real question is: Why five days? I haven't heard anybody give me a reason why we work five days other than tradition," he said. "What I think the trial has proved is that working in a way that is most applicable to your organization to achieve the sweet spot of productivity, the best productivity for the time, that's what you've got to me aiming at."
4 Day Week previously conducted similar trials in the U.S. and Ireland and says it will also release results from pilots in Australia and New Zealand, South Africa, Brazil, North America and elsewhere in Europe.
veryGood! (8599)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Breaking Down Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter: Grammys, Critics and a Nod to Becky
- New York City’s mayor gets baptized in jail by Rev. Al Sharpton on Good Friday
- Could tugboats have helped avert the bridge collapse tragedy in Baltimore?
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Harvard applications drop 5% after year of turmoil on the Ivy League campus
- Moscow attack fuels concern over global ISIS-K threat growing under the Taliban in Afghanistan
- Connecticut will try to do what nobody has done in March Madness: Stop Illinois star Terrence Shannon
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- California governor to deploy 500 surveillance cameras to Oakland to fight crime
Ranking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Funeral held for Joe Lieberman, longtime U.S. senator and 2000 vice presidential nominee
- Steve Martin: Comic, banjo player, and now documentary film subject
- Clark and Reese bring star power to Albany 2 Regional that features Iowa, LSU, Colorado and UCLA
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- LSU star and Baltimore native Angel Reese on bridge collapse: 'I'm praying for Baltimore'
- DA suggests Donald Trump violated gag order with post about daughter of hush-money trial judge
- Truck driver charged with criminally negligent homicide in fatal Texas bus crash
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
New York City’s mayor gets baptized in jail by Rev. Al Sharpton on Good Friday
Save 70% on These Hidden Deals From Free People and Elevate Your Wardrobe
Melissa Joan Hart expresses solidarity with Nickelodeon child stars in 'Quiet on Set' docuseries
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Joseph Lieberman Sought Middle Ground on Climate Change
Is apple juice good for you? 'Applejuiceification' is the internet's latest controversy.
Rebel Wilson lost her virginity at 35. That's nothing to be ashamed about.