In Sweden, an Experiment Turns Shorter Workdays Into Bigger Gains
I wish we could try this out in America-I've thought this for a long time. There seems like so much wasted time at work just to fill the "8 hour shift"...
GOTHENBURG, Sweden Arturo Perez used to come home frazzled from his job as a caregiver at the Svartedalens nursing home. Eight-hour stretches of tending to residents with senility or Alzheimers would leave him sapped with little time to spend with his three children.
But life changed when Svartedalens was selected for a Swedish experiment about the future of work. In a bid to improve well-being, employees were switched to a six-hour workday last year with no pay cut. Within a week, Mr. Perez was brimming with energy, and residents said the standard of care was higher.
Whats good is that were happy, said Mr. Perez, a single father. And a happy worker is a better worker.
Sweden has long been a laboratory for initiatives to strike a better work-life balance, part of a collective ideal that treating workers well is good for the bottom line. Many Swedish offices use a system of flexible work hours and parental leave and child-care policies are among the worlds most generous.
The experiment at Svartedalens goes further by mandating a 30-hour week. An audit published in mid-April concluded that the program in its first year had sharply reduced absenteeism, and improved productivity and worker health.
Weve had 40 years of a 40-hour workweek, and now were looking at a society with higher sick leaves and early retirement, said Daniel Bernmar, leader of the Left party on Gothenburgs City Council, which is running the trial and hopes to make it the standard. We want a new discussion in Sweden about how work life should be to maintain a good welfare state for the next 40 years.
But a backlash has formed in some corners of this bustling city, with opponents warning that the idea is a utopian folly. If Gothenburg, let alone Sweden, were to adopt a six-hour workday, they say, the economy would suffer from reduced competitiveness and strained finances.
Its the type of economic thinking that has gotten other countries in Europe into trouble, said Maria Rydén, Gothenburgs deputy mayor and a member of the opposition Moderates party. She is leading a campaign to kill the trial, citing high taxpayer costs and arguments the government should not intrude in the workplace.
We cant pay people to not work, she added.
A similar model has long ignited controversy in France, ever since a Socialist government made a 35-hour workweek mandatory in 2000. Companies complain it has reduced competitiveness and created billions in additional costs for hiring and social charges. Unions defend the law as shielding workers from employers who might otherwise return to excessively long work hours.
The measure is now riddled with so many loopholes that most employees currently work around 40 hours a week, on par with the European Union average. But President François Hollande is facing nationwide strikes as he seeks to further ease parts of the law.
Such concerns have not deterred a growing number of small businesses in Sweden from testing the concept. Many found that a shorter workday can reduce turnover, enhance employee creativity and lift productivity enough to offset the cost of hiring additional staff.
We thought doing a shorter workweek would mean wed have to hire more, but it hasnt resulted in that because everyone works more efficiently, said Maria Brath, who founded an Internet search optimization start-up in Stockholm three years ago based on a six-hour day. The company, which has 20 employees, has doubled its revenue and profit each year.
Since we work fewer hours, we are constantly figuring out ways to do more with our time, Ms. Brath said.
Sitting inside their airy office, Braths employees checked off the ways. We dont send unnecessary emails or tie ourselves up in meetings, said Thommy Ottinger, a pay-per-click specialist. If you have only six hours to work, you dont waste your time or other peoples time.
I wish we could try this out in America-I've thought this for a long time. There seems like so much wasted time at work just to fill the "8 hour shift"...