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32-Hour Workweek for America Proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders (theguardian.com) 390

The Guardian reports that this week "Bernie Sanders, the independent senator from Vermont who twice ran for the Democratic presidential nomination, introduced a bill to establish a four-day US working week." "Moving to a 32-hour workweek with no loss of pay is not a radical idea," Sanders said on Thursday. "Today, American workers are over 400% more productive than they were in the 1940s. And yet millions of Americans are working longer hours for lower wages than they were decades ago. "That has got to change. The financial gains from the major advancements in artificial intelligence, automation and new technology must benefit the working class, not just corporate chief executives and wealthy stockholders on Wall Street.

"It is time to reduce the stress level in our country and allow Americans to enjoy a better quality of life. It is time for a 32-hour workweek with no loss in pay."

The proposed bill "has received the endorsement of the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, United Auto Workers, the Service Employees International Union, the Association of Flight Attendants" — as well as several other labor unions, reports USA Today: More than half of adults employed full time reported working more than 40 hours per week, according to a 2019 Gallup poll... More than 70 British companies started to test a four-day workweek last year, and most respondents reported there has been no loss in productivity.
A statement from Senator Sanders: Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, and Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase, predicted last year that advancements in technology would lead to a three or three-and-a-half-day workweek in the coming years. Despite these predictions, Americans now work more hours than the people of most other wealthy nations, but are earning less per week than they did 50 years ago, after adjusting for inflation.
"Sanders also pointed to other countries that have reduced their workweeks, such as France, Norway and Denmark," adds NBC News.

USA Today notes that "While Sanders' role as chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee places a greater focus on shortening the workweek, it is unlikely the bill will garner enough support from Republicans to become federal law and pass in both chambers."

And political analysts who spoke to ABC News "cast doubt on the measure's chances of passage in a divided Congress where opposition from Republicans is all but certain," reports ABC News, "and even the extent of support among Democrats remains unclear."
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32-Hour Workweek for America Proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders

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  • Juggle more jobs (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bazorg ( 911295 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @02:56AM (#64323821)

    This might help some people better juggle their multiple jobs.

  • not radical, not new (Score:5, Informative)

    by Tom ( 822 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @02:58AM (#64323823) Homepage Journal

    Anyone who thinks this is some radical lefties demand hasn't paid attention. This has been on the table for decades, at least since the 1970s. Automation (industrial robots at that time) was always seen as something that would allow people to work less while earning the same.

    And, fun fact, some research indicates that we now spend more of our life time on work as in any other period in human history. Many primitive societes may have worked just a few hours each day.

    The current mental health crisis has a lot to do with overload. Work, social media, hypernovelty, etc. all create mental load.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by sg_oneill ( 159032 )

      Many primitive societes may have worked just a few hours each day.

      Yep , Aboriginal societies here in australia, although in some respect life was tough because the environment was harsh, had fairly idylic work days. The men would go hunting in the morning, usually back in by 12, then the rest of the afternoon was teaching the boys or just chilling out. The women would do some casual gathering (berries and other plants) , then in the afternoon there would be a big cookup and the whole village would have a f

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Though after reading "The Biggest Estate on Earth", I'd consider Australia an exception. The easy hunting and gathering was the result of centuries of careful land management.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @08:54AM (#64324599) Journal

        A lot of that though comes down to we have redefined what work is. Today's definition seems to be any activity not directly tied to my most immediate hedonistic desires is work.

        'rest of the afternoon teaching' -> we now consider educating children is certainly considered work today by many.

        'women would do causal gathering' -> I would question how casual it was. They tribe probably needed those calories and certainly the nutrients. I'd be those women went gathering even when they 'really did not feel up to it' or otherwise wished to do something else. It was chore, perhaps not as soul crushing as some factory work or but still a chore.

        go on walkabout -> Right that would have been 'scouting' as much as anything. Where are the game trails, where are other resources useful plants to harvest etc, where might we move the village later..

        It might be work you'd rather do than the activities you do today. It might have been a lot more self directed, but that does not mean it wasn't 'work' or that it was in any way 'optional.' Doing it was needed for surviving, being successful and efficent meant your group might be thriving, and failing or not doing those activities resulting in starving.
           

    • Anyone who thinks this is some radical lefties demand hasn't paid attention. This has been on the table for decades, at least since the 1970s.

      What makes you think we did not have radical lefties in the 1970s, or earlier?

      The current mental health crisis has a lot to do with overload. Work, social media, hypernovelty, etc. all create mental load.

      The effective solution is to cut back on social media, not work.

      • The current mental health crisis has a lot to do with overload. Work, social media, hypernovelty, etc. all create mental load.

        The effective solution is to cut back on social media, not work.

        It might help a little but we still need to cut back on work. 40 hour work weeks and multiple jobs are corrosive in the medium to long term. The biggest problem with our current system is that there are too many simpletons in management who think that more hours = more productivity and advocate for the constant crunch. Unfortunately what they don't realise is that human minds aren't built for prolonged concentration, and even if you can keep them on task by using automated systems like Amazon warehouses do,

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        What makes you think we did not have radical lefties in the 1970s, or earlier?

        Where did I say that or what part exactly made you think that's what I was saying?

        The effective solution is to cut back on social media, not work.

        I don't see that as being mutually exclusive.

    • Oh it's much older than that. According to this historian [youtube.com], work was dramatically different (and shorter) before the invention of the clock, roughly equivalent to getting 3.5 months of vacation.

    • Automation (industrial robots at that time) was always seen as something that would allow people to work less while earning the same.

      Actually, I think The Jetsons nailed it with George pressing one button at the beginning of his shift and then sitting there for the remaining 8 hours doing absolutely nothing. Even if automation makes everything easier, corporations are still going to demand their pound of flesh, because they're the ones who own the robots.

    • If you want the idyllic aboriginal lifestyle you can do,that but,you';l need to give up,-everything- our higher stress society creates.

      Go find a cave. You can bring some sharpened sticks and rocks and the manufactured clothing you're wearing and go live that life. No cheating! You don't get modern medical You don't get social welfare programs. You don't get Uber. You don't get the internet. If you're cold, cut wood with your axe that you made by hand and build a fire. Except you don't have matches.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Their lives were short and brutish.

        I wouldn't want to live in a cave, either (though more recent research indicates that caves were mostly used for storage and safe retreats, not as permanent dwellings, but that's beside the point).

        It's also a misconception that people died at 35. Average life expectancy numbers figure in the incredibly high child mortality (over 50% for most of human history).

        All that said, we don't need to go back to pre-historic times. Every society ever has had lavish festivals, or their equivalents of pyramids and stone

      • You don't get Uber.

        Oh no! No uber! The horror! What ever will I do without an app I haven't got installed.

        Back to the wage grind for me.

    • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

      I think it depends on what you define as work. I've heard people say that n medieval times people supposedly worked much less than today.

      And I have this suspicion they only calculated the time they spent working for their liege and completely ignored the time they spent on feeding themselves and in the dark hours mending clothes and tools.

      I do think those people had probably better stress management, outside of actual famine and war, but that they worked any less? No... Hard to imagine.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        I think it depends on what you define as work.

        True, but for other reasons. In most of human history, the line between work and not-work was more blurry. Is it work when you and the rest of the guys prepare the village festival? And the other way around, do you count your commute time to your work time?

        I'm not an expert on this, I just read a lot. All of these things are estimates from limited sources.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      A 4 day week is becoming a major draw for employees. If employers want the get the best people, or any people where there are shortages, they will need to start offering better work/life balance and lower hours.

      One of the reasons they really hate TikTok is that gen Z is using it to organize unofficially, kind of like a union but done on social media and emboldening individuals instead of via collective bargaining.

    • You are stupid. People COULD work much less if they were happy with the economic standard of the 70s or 40s. 3 % growth for 50 years (mid 70s till today) = 338 % higher GDP/capita. *EVEN* if inequality has increased, the poor has several times higher living standard today compared with the 70s (the corresponding numbers for 80 years, mid 40s till today is 964 %, and growth was much higher in the 50s and 60s than 3 % so the actual number is even higher).

  • No loss in pay (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @02:59AM (#64323825)

    Not happening. If companies are forced to pay OT past 32 hours, they'll freeze pay at current levels and do staggered shifts. It might increase hiring numbers, or it might just shut down some businesses that have too great a percentage of their operating budget tied up in labor costs.

    In some cases, larger companies will do most of the above and just force 8+ hours OT to make up the difference in productivity, and raise the price of product to compensate.

    Either way, hamfisted measures like this won't necessarily have the desired results. It'll encourage companies to automate away even more positions wherever possible. Nobody should expect good ideas or positive results from doddering old fools like Bernie Sanders.

    • Re: No loss in pay (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @03:33AM (#64323893)

      Not happening. If companies are forced to pay OT past 32 hours, they'll freeze pay at current levels and do staggered shifts. It might increase hiring numbers, or it might just shut down some businesses that have too great a percentage of their operating budget tied up in labor costs.

      If a business shuts down because it can't afford its operating costs with its revenue, isn't that the definition of a business that failed? That's not the employee's fault. It's not their job to let themselves be underpaid just to keep the owners business plan viable.

      You know what wouldreally help businesses lower labor costs? If they didn't have to pay employees at all! So clearly the best course of action isn't to reduce the rules on what's considered a normal work week, we should be bringing back slavery! Right?

      • If a business shuts down because it can't afford its operating costs with its revenue, isn't that the definition of a business that failed? That's not the employee's fault. It's not their job to let themselves be underpaid just to keep the owners business plan viable.

        Lol, if a non-viable idea mandated by government causes businesses to fail, then that's the businesses' fault?

        • Lol, if a non-viable idea mandated by government causes businesses to fail, then that's the businesses' fault?

          That would be a valid point, if not for the fact that others are successfully implementing it. If others are able to do it, it isn’t non-viable.

      • So clearly the best course of action isn't to reduce the rules on what's considered a normal work week, we should be bringing back slavery! Right?

        Can't bring back what you never got rid of. The state simply reserved for itself the right to determine who could be enslaved — you can be legally enslaved once you have been convicted of a crime. See: 13th and 14th amendments.

    • Nobody should expect good ideas or positive results from doddering old fools like Bernie Sanders.

      Ever see any of the really old videos of him? He's been doing this for practically his whole adult life. I feel bad for the guy because he genuinely does seem to want to make things better for lower income folks, but he's clearly bit off more than he can chew.

    • by chill ( 34294 )

      If companies are forced to pay OT past 32 hours, they'll freeze pay at current levels and do staggered shifts.

      Pay isn't set that way, it is set by supply and demand. Freezing pay only works if the workers have no other options, and the demographic trends of the Baby Boomers retiring in large numbers and a smaller generation following means more jobs than workers -- meaning worker choice. Forcing more overtime is one possible option, constrained by the same supply-demand. The bill Sanders is proposing [senate.gov] mandates time-and-a-half past 8 hours and double-time past 12-hours a day. Short of a good old fashioned dose of Nix [cato.org]

    • You say that as if companies aren't already trying to automate away as many positions as possible every time there's an opportunity to do so.

      If you're old enough, you might remember when self-serve gas pumps didn't exist and a gas station would have a few employees to handle pumps. Now self-serve is the norm in all but a couple of places in the country.

      Retail businesses keep attempting to move to self-checkout only, even people hate them and they allow more theft to occur.

      We have a whole raft of employers

    • It'll encourage companies to automate away even more positions wherever possible. Nobody should expect good ideas or positive results from doddering old fools like Bernie Sanders.

      The original Luddites opposed the automation of textiles. Are you wearing hand-woven textiles right now?

      Let me guess: all the automation that has happened already is great, all the automation about to happen is a tragedy.

      • Re:No loss in pay (Score:5, Informative)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday March 18, 2024 @08:26AM (#64324495) Homepage Journal

        The original Luddites opposed the automation of textiles. Are you wearing hand-woven textiles right now?

        That's a dumb lie. The Luddites opposed the automation of textiles manufacturing (and other tasks) only as long as the profits went to a few rich people at the top of the social pyramid, instead of benefiting all people including the weavers being replaced by machine looms. They were not protesting progress, they were protesting progress being used to discard former workers in a ditch.

        No doubt you didn't mean to lie, you just believed some stuff you half-heard about the Luddites once. But you're repeating an intentional lie, whether the intent was yours or not, so you're now a party to it.

  • Look why don't we focus on having people work a 40 hour work week and taking a few weeks off leave each year before get all aspirational.

    The problem in America isn't the working week, or the crap leave entitlements. It's the fat that despite the entitlements are so low people continue to overwork and not take leave.

    You can't fix culture through a legal system.

    • Why not look at the French, who have a 35 hour week and take a few months off each year (the holidays go in between the strike days).

      • I think you missed my point. Bernie Sanders won't make Americans French by proposing a law. Americans need to *want* good work life balance. They don't. Statistically they overwork, and statistically they have not only some of the lowest amount of leave granted each year, but also some of the highest unpaid leave.

        Americans: There's a dollar to be earned, I can't just go enjoy my life instead!

  • Flight Attendants? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by imunfair ( 877689 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @03:41AM (#64323907) Homepage

    I understand how certain more cerebral jobs could easily be knocked down to 30 hours a week with little to no loss in work output, but anything manual labor related like manufacturing or flight attendants, both mentioned as being in favor of this hours reduction, would require extra bodies to fill the hours. Airlines aren't going to run 20% less flights a week because the government decided people should work one day less.

    The lack of labor will drive up wages, which isn't bad given the current state of pay in America, but it is a factor to consider, and in some cases companies may choose to keep the same hours and employees but pay overtime for the extra 8 hours, so pay would go up but work hours would be otherwise unchanged for the employees.

    It's an interesting question, and definitely not as simple as just allowing everyone to only work four days a week from now on.

    • A larger pool of trained labour working shorter shifts makes it easier to find someone willing and able to pick up an additional shift to cover sickness or holiday. That's a significant benefit to the employer.

  • Oh noes! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @03:52AM (#64323939)
    OMG! If we change the number of hours in already existing labour laws, the sky will fall in, toilet seats will be left up, milk will be spilt, & kittens will weep for their mothers! It's just the start of a slippery slope to... dare I say it... the 'S' word? SOCIALISM!

    Alternatively, you could try considering the arguments & reading up on the already dozens of successful pilot schemes around the world. You know, if you'd like to like in a world where people are happier & healthier at no additional cost.
    • Define "successful". In a market economy with competition, a successful change will propagate organically. If it doesn't it is not successful. Why don't you start your own company where you work 32 h/week and prove your point?

  • Henry Ford (Score:4, Insightful)

    by galabar ( 518411 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @03:58AM (#64323957)
    Henry Ford created the 40 hour work week because it made sense financially. He was able to coax workers away from his competitors. They had to follow suit. We will get a 32 hour work week when it becomes economically possible. Someone, like Henry Ford, will create the 32 hour work week because it makes economic sense to do so at the time. Competitors will have to follow. The government enforcing a 32 hour work week at the same pay will simply cause inflation. Works will receive, in real wages, only 80% of what they currently do (no matter how many times the government increases wages).
    • Henry Ford created the 40 hour work week because it made sense financially. He was able to coax workers away from his competitors. They had to follow suit. We will get a 32 hour work week when it becomes economically possible. Someone, like Henry Ford, will create the 32 hour work week because it makes economic sense to do so at the time. Competitors will have to follow.

      You're imagining a system in which we have meaningful competition. That no longer exists due to anticompetitive consolidation which has been permitted to proceed by our government, which has the power to stop mergers if they are not in the public interest. However, the majority of politicians have been bought off by corporate criminals, so the consolidation has been permitted to continue. The only new automaker which has been created in decades, for example, in fact profits from inferior treatment of worker

  • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @04:15AM (#64323993) Journal

    People of the conservative persuasion (to which I often count myself too, mind), seem to imagine that more than five percent of the people actually do work all hours that they clock.

    I would bet many of them even overestimate their own work ethic.

    As someone who has dealt with bore-outs, let me tell you that it is EXHAUSTING trying to look like you're working when you aren't.

    Having fewer hours to squeeze your work in might have enormous benefits in this regard. Deadline pressure makes it easier to find motivation and fewer hours to play this damn charade might free up SO much efficiency. Seriously, I see a lot of potential there.

  • This is the real first test for how AI is going to go. Will people be able to take advantage of greater productivity and have more leisure time of their own or will the people who own control of the AI keep it all for themselves.
  • by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Monday March 18, 2024 @12:39PM (#64325439)

    Bernie needs to start his own company and offer a 32 hour work week. Because it's such a great idea, everyone will flock to his company, and he will blow the competition out of the water.

    Or is it that Bernie is just good at telling other people what they should do?

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