期刊论文详细信息
Sustainability
“Friday off”: Reducing Working Hours in Europe
Giorgos Kallis2  Michael Kalush1  Hugh O.𠆟lynn1  Jack Rossiter1 
[1]ICREA, ICTA-UAB and Research & Degrowth, Bellatera 08193, Barcelona, Spain
关键词: working hours;    Europe;    4-day workweek;    environmental sustainability;    quality of life;    productivity;    productiveness;    unemployment;    binary economics;   
DOI  :  10.3390/su5041545
来源: mdpi
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【 摘 要 】

This article explores the pros and cons for reducing working hours in Europe. To arrive to an informed judgment we review critically the theoretical and empirical literature, mostly from economics, concerning the relation between working hours on the one hand, and productivity, employment, quality of life, and the environment, on the other. We adopt a binary economics distinction between capital and labor productiveness, and are concerned with how working hours may be reduced without harming the earning capacity of workers. There are reasons to believe that reducing working hours may absorb some unemployment, especially in the short-run, even if less than what is advocated by proponents of the proposal. Further, there may well be strong benefits for the quality of peoples’ lives. Environmental benefits are likely but depend crucially on complementary policies or social conditions that will ensure that the time liberated will not be directed to resource-intensive or environmentally harmful consumption. It is questionable whether reduced working hours are sustainable in the long-term given resource limits and climate change. We conclude that while the results of reducing working hours are uncertain, this may be a risk worth taking, especially as an interim measure that may relieve unemployment while other necessary structural changes are instituted.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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