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Experts call on the government to look at flexible four-day work weeks ahead of massive Australasian trial

Pressure will be put on the government as an employer to look at flexibility measures like a four-day working week, says an economic expert.
ethnic four-day
Source: Unsplash/Memento Media

Pressure will be put on the government as an employer to look at flexibility measures like a four-day working week, says an economic expert.

Speaking at an online panel hosted by CEDA on the four-day working week, University of Queenslandโ€™s professor John Quiggin said the combination of full employment and the COVID-19 pandemic had led to the realisation by employees that things could be done differently.

โ€œThatโ€™s something reflected in the interest of governments as employers,โ€ Quiggin said.

โ€œWeโ€™re also seeing, I think, within the union movement, a bit of tension between a continuing push for more flexibility for workers [โ€ฆ] versus still a significant valourisation of work โ€” that more work, more jobs, more hours is always good.โ€

At the federal level, the APSC expects the topic of a four-day working week to come up as part of the ongoing APS workplace bargaining.

CPSU national secretary Melissa Donnelly previously told The Mandarin that flexibility was a โ€œcentral issueโ€ for employees, like the right to work from home.

โ€œThe four-day work week, and exploring how that may work in the APS, is another area of interest to employees. Like in other jurisdictions, a pilot or trial may be the best way to examine how the four-day work week could operate in practice,โ€ Donnelly said at the time.

At the moment, the four-day working week movement is being led by the private sector.

The results from trials by 4 Day Week Global have thus far been promising, with Boston College economist Juliet Schor saying during the panel the โ€œproof was in the puddingโ€.

โ€œWeโ€™re probably close to 200 different companies now in these trials, only a handful have decided not to continue [โ€ฆ] so very, very successful from the companiesโ€™ point of view,โ€ Schor said.

โ€œEmployee well-being results have been off the charts.โ€

The model being proposed by 4 Day Week Global is the 100:80:100 model: 100% pay, 80% time, and 100% productivity.

For the public service looking to recruit the next generation, trends in how millennials and Gen Z work should be paid attention to by leaders.

During the CEDA panel, 4 Day Week Global managing director and founder Charlotte Lockhart said business leaders should be prepared for a โ€œdifferent way of workingโ€ to arrive.

โ€œI think there is a general acceptance from governments and from businesses that reducing work time is part of the future. So, therefore, itโ€™s just about the logistics of getting there,โ€ Lockhart said.

Lockhart quoted Henry Ford, who was the first employer to adopt a five-day working week in the 1920s: โ€œwhether you think you can, or you think you canโ€™t โ€” youโ€™re rightโ€.

โ€œThe difference is the agility in the leadership thinking โ€ฆ it comes down to being prepared,โ€ the founder added.

An Australasian pilot of the four-day working week through 4 Day Week Global will begin โ€œshortlyโ€.

This article was first published by The Mandarin.