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Less Work, More Living

Working fewer hours could save our economy, save our sanity, and help save our planet.

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TAKE A PEEK INSIDE THE FALL 2011 ISSUE OF YES! MAGAZINE

Millions of Americans have lost control over the basic rhythm of their daily lives. They work too much, eat too quickly, socialize too little, drive and sit in traffic for too many hours, don’t get enough sleep, and feel harried too much of the time. It’s a way of life that undermines basic sources of wealth and well-being—such as strong family and community ties, a deep sense of meaning, and physical health.

Earn less, spend less, emit and degrade less. That's the formula. The more time a person has, the better his or her quality of life, and the easier it is to live sustainably.

Imagining a world in which jobs take up much less of our time may seem utopian, especially now, when a scarcity mentality dominates the economic conversation. People who are employed often find it difficult to scale back their jobs. Costs of medical care, education, and child care are rising. It may be hard to find new sources of income when U.S. companies have been laying people off at a dizzying rate.

But fewer work hours for people with jobs is a key step toward solving the unemployment crisis—while giving Americans healthier lives. Fewer hours means more jobs are available to people who need them. Living on less pay usually means consuming less, making more of the things one needs at home, and living lighter, whether by design or by accident.

Today, driven both by necessity and the deliberate choice to live simply, more Americans are shifting toward fewer work hours. It’s a trend that, if done correctly, could get us out of our current economic crisis and away from unsustainable economic growth.

Finding Time

Water fountain piggyback photo by CSuspect

Photo by Chris Suspect.

Economists today focus solely on growth as a mechanism for job creation. But for much of the industrial age, falling hours have been roughly as important a contributor to employment as market growth.

The grueling schedules of the 19th century undermined health and prevented people from achieving what we now call quality of life. Hours of work in the United States began to decline after about 1870—from about 3,000 a year to 2,342 by 1929. In 1973 annual work hours stood at 1,887 (fewer than 40 hours per week, on average). If hours hadn’t fallen, unemployment would have grown even before the 1930s Depression.

Since the 1970s, Americans have been working longer. According to government survey data, the average working person was putting in 180 more hours of work in 2006 than he or she was in 1979. The trends are more pronounced on a household basis. Many more men are working schedules in excess of 50 hours a week. (Thirty percent of male college graduates and 20 percent of all full-time male workers are on schedules that usually exceed 50 hours.)

Not surprisingly, over the last 20 years, a large number of U.S. employees report being overworked. A 2004 study found that 44 percent of respondents were often or very often overworked, overwhelmed at their jobs, or unable to step back and process what’s going on. A third reported being chronically overworked. These overworked employees had much higher stress levels, worse physical health, higher rates of depression, and a reduced ability to take care of themselves than their less-pressured colleagues.

Doing it yourself, or self-provisioning, is now on the rise, both because of a culture shift and because in hard times, people have more time and less money.

But there are recent signs that a culture shift toward shorter hours has begun. In 1996, when I first surveyed on this issue, 19 percent of the adult population reported having made a voluntary lifestyle change during the previous five years that entailed earning less money. In a 2004 survey by the Center for a New American Dream, 48 percent did.

The stagnant economy, difficult as it is, represents an opportunity for expanding the norm of part-time work. In the first year of the recession, many businesses avoided layoffs by reducing hours through furloughs, unpaid vacations, four-day workweeks, and flex-time. By mid-2009, one study of large firms found that 20 percent had reduced hours to forestall job cuts.

Unfortunately, a lack of institutional support for short hours policies reversed many of those programs, as economist Dean Baker argued in a recent paper. Baker hypothesizes that businesses would provide an additional 1 to 2 million jobs a year if workers could collect unemployment insurance when they are on short schedules.

One thing we do know is that people who voluntarily start working less are generally pleased. In the New Dream survey, 23 percent said they were not only happier, but they didn’t miss the money. Sixty percent reported being happier, but missed the money to varying degrees. Only 10 percent regretted the change. And I’ve also found downshifters who began with a job loss or an involuntary reduction in pay or hours, but came to prefer having a wealth of time.

The Wealth We Make Ourselves

Earn less, spend less, emit and degrade less. That’s the formula. The more time a person has, the better his or her quality of life, and the easier it is to live sustainably. A study by David Rosnick and Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Policy Research estimated that if the United States were to shift to the working patterns of Western European countries, where workers spend on average 255 fewer hours per year at their jobs, energy consumption would decline about 20 percent. New research I have conducted with Kyle Knight and Gene Rosa of Washington State University, looking at all industrialized countries over the last 50 years, finds that nations with shorter working hours have considerably smaller ecological and carbon footprints.

There’s also a small but growing body of studies that examine these questions at the household scale. A French study found that, after controlling for income, households with longer working hours increased their spending on housing (buying larger homes with more appliances), transport (longer hours reduced the use of public transportation), and hotels and restaurants. A recent Swedish study found that when households reduce their working hours by 1 percent, their greenhouse gas emissions go down by 0.8 percent. One explanation is that when households spend more time earning money, they compensate in part by purchasing more goods and services, and buying them at later stages of processing (e.g., more prepared foods). People who have more time at home and less at work can engage in slower, less resource-intensive activities. They can hang their clothing on the line, rather than use an electric dryer. More important, they can switch to less energy-intensive but more time-consuming modes of transport (mass transit or carpool versus private auto, train versus airplane). They can garden and cook at home. They can meet more of their basic needs by making, fixing, doing, and providing things themselves.

Doing-it-yourself, or self-provisioning, is now on the rise, both because of a culture shift and because in hard times people have more time and less money.

In April 2009, according to a national survey, one in five Americans said they were making plans to plant a garden that year. After the recession hit, service-oriented businesses such as salons, pet groomers, and nannies experienced a decline in business as people began doing these things for themselves. An annual expo called Maker Faire that started in California has been attracting growing numbers of do-it-yourselfers and inventors. It’s spreading to new locations around the country, and attendance has reportedly quadrupled since 2006.

True Wealth book cover

By Juliet Schor
Penguin Books, 2011, 272 pages, $16
Support YES! when you buy here from an independent bookstore.

People are returning to lost arts practiced by earlier generations—woodworking, quilting, brewing beer, and canning and preserving. They are also hunting, fishing, and sewing. People engage in these activities because they enjoy them and they yield better-quality products or products that are not easily available. Producing artisanal jams, sauces, and smoked meats, or handmade sweaters, quilts, and clothing makes these pricey items affordable.

Self-provisioning is also getting popular in housing. For example, the movement toward straw-bale homes has taken off in the Southwest. Straw-bale construction has become prevalent enough that some localities have introduced code for it, and there are even banks that lend for these structures. People are also experimenting with the use of compressed earth bricks, poured earth, “papercrete” (which uses recycled paper and a small amount of concrete), and a variety of other materials. New Englanders have revived the colonial-era tradition of community barn-raisings, only now they’re coming together to build yurts.

As failed housing markets around the country stagnate, one can expect more real estate refugees to construct their own debt-free shelter with recycled, low-cost, or no-cost materials.

Self-provisioning is also a spur to entrepreneurial activity. Most people who practice it don’t self-provide everything. They find some productive activities they prefer, are more skilled at, or can do more easily. They trade or sell what they’re best at producing. With this specialization, self-provisioning becomes a pathway to incubating a set of small businesses that will flourish as the sustainable economy takes off.

Guy smiling with grapes, photo by leedav
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A large-scale switch to less work and more production and self-provisioning at home will require some collective solutions. We need systems that provide basic security to all individuals and families—from childhood through old age. Access to basic needs such as education and health care must be widely affordable.

But it’s possible for many people to take small steps—right now—toward fewer job hours and more self-sufficiency. There are challenges, to be sure, but for many, the switch from paper-pushing to gardening has been welcome. Self-providers value their newfound skills, love the chance to be creative, and are getting satisfaction and security from constructing a more self-reliant lifestyle. The ability to work for oneself is highly valued. They are nourished by connection with the earth. Perhaps most important, they are rewarded by the opportunity to live without endangering others and the planet.


Juliet Schor is professor of sociology at Boston College and the author of the national bestseller The Overspent American. This article is adapted from True Wealth by Juliet Schor, reprinted by arrangement with Penguin Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. Copyright (c) Juliet Schor, 2011. It appeared in New Livelihoods, the Fall 2011 issue of YES! Magazine.

Interested?
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  • How to Build a People's Movement
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  • Exit Ramp to a New Economy
    To cope with the recession, some companies are cutting hours instead of employees. Will the trend have long-term effects?

 

New Livelihoods
Schor, J. (2011, August 31). Less Work, More Living. Retrieved May 22, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/issues/new-livelihoods/less-work-more-living. All Rights Reserved


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Reader Comments

Bank should sell Foreclosed homes for $5,000-SELL HOMES AND THEY WILL COME

Posted by Babyface at Sep 20, 2011 03:51 PM
American dream is to own a home,get a OK job,or farm it,raise familys.
Question is-- How many homes in USA total are in Forecloser-/bank owned, or just sittn ther wasten- The banks will win money back either way, SELL HOMES FOR $5,000 FOR A 2B/1BA HOME- OR A 3B/2B FOR $10,000. Banks were bailed out now it is time for banks to sell cheap to the people who got cheated. fraud. Raise taxes 2% on rich paychecks.
Since ther are so many homes ,the banks will LOSE big money if they just sit ther, so SELL cheap get the money back, and people will and towns will grow,business will be build, and everyone knows how to grow veg.-and recycle, learn that in school.
SELL THE HOME AND THEY WILL COME. USE THE LOTTO MONEY TO HELP REBUILD SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS PAY OH THATS RIGHT THAT IS WHAT IT IS SUPPOSE TO BE PARTLY USED FOR, BUT THE STATE CONGRESS USE THE MONEY TO BUILD BIG SPORTS COMPLEXES. Stop all FREE foreign aid- loan it all with interest return,trade it sell it,but STOP given usa money for FREE-get payed USA. Unless its to feed the children.

population and jobs

Posted by Garrett Connelly at Sep 21, 2011 07:24 PM
The U.S. is among the top five fastest growing populations on planet earth. Immigration is skillfully used to undermine the wage rate and make workers insecure as wage slaves in corporatism.

population and environment

Posted by Gregory at Sep 22, 2011 11:38 PM
Along with depressing wages, increasing population (the majority due to immmigration) makes the goal of sustainability impossible.

Health insurance

Posted by Joe at Sep 22, 2011 02:55 PM
If we are to legitimize part-time jobs in the U.S., we need to extend the benefits & legal protections that full-time jobs carry. Most people I know who work full-time, especially in blue-collar and service/ hospitality industries, only do it so they can earn benefits like sick time, vacation time, a retirement plan, and health insurance. These are not commonly available to those who work less than 35 hours a week.

I recently traded "up" to a full-time position from part-time, and I am actually taking home less money than I was before- but now my family has health insurance. It's not worth it, but I don't have a choice. I'm far from the only one.

Attitude Shift by Employers Needed

Posted by Dave at Sep 25, 2011 07:39 AM
As Joe mentioned, benefits are a key issue that prevents many people from working less than 40 hrs/wk. But beyond that is the fact that most employers want more than 40 because it's more efficient (cheaper for them) than hiring more employees. It's easier to manage one person working 60 hrs. than two working 30 hrs. each.

And someone who wants to work 30 hrs. is seen as lazy. This is where an attitude shift is needed. Employers need to understand that having a life outside of work is a valid lifestyle choice. It provides for more time with family, more time to volunteer, more time to engage in civic activities, etc. as the article points out.

Less Work, More Living: More Time, Less Carbon

Posted by Gregory Wright at Nov 19, 2011 03:44 AM
One way to help solve the jobs crisis is a proposal I wrote for a Four-Day, 36-Hour Workweek, "More Time, Less Carbon," in Take Back Your Time's online newsletter, at www.timeday.org/news-vol5issue1.asp#03 (January-March 2007). The gist of this idea is that commuting, especially the monster commuting too many Americans daily drive now, is a major part of many people's workday -- a big piece of the work they do, and frequently the most grueling. As well as simultaneously costly and unpaid. A new 36-hour official full-time workweek that is created by a reform of the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act that redefines the full-time week as 36 instead of 40 hours will enable a work week of four not-necessarily-consecutive days, a one-tenth reduction in work -- paired with a one-fifth reduction in commuting -- which, even with a ten-percent (hopefully somewhat less) reduction in pay, would be a substantial personal time-increasing, carbon pollution-reducing, health-promoting, cost-saving, road accident exposure-diminishing, and unpaid work (i.e., commuting)-reducing benefit for the nation's long-distance and commuters, and many shorter-distance commuters as well.
 
The Four-Day 36-Hour Workweek is a great response to Dean Baker's question in Yes! (www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/between-overworked-and-out-of-work), "Instead of having 10 percent unemployment, what if we worked 10 percent fewer hours?," and a robust way to achieve the multiple job-boosting and prosperity-promoting benefits of "shorter working time" that Baker describes.
 
An excellent enumeration of the personal, social, and environmental benefits of the generic four-day workweek is found in Aaron Newton's article, "16 Arguments for the Four-Day Workweek" (www.groovygreen.com/groove/?p=2223).
 
This reform would also grease the skids for support of the recommendation by the "cat food commission" for a 15-cent increase in the federal gasoline tax, which as an environmentalist and anti-carbon advocate I fully support, and as an advocate for hands off of Social Security. I submit that a serious national move to a Four-Day Workweek -- in the context of a newly-redefined full-time workweek of 36 hours, to enable nine-hour instead of ten-hour days -- is one of the very best ways to justify and enact a U.S. gasoline tax increase (which would best be imposed in a couple of year-at-a-time increases) and its revenue and environmental benefits.

Easier in Europe

Posted by Arto Teräs at Jan 09, 2012 06:10 PM
Based on the comments it seems that making a downshifting choice is easier in Europe. Most of the countries have public health care, which might not be as good and have longer queues than private clinics, but of reasonable quality and available to all. Benefits such as paid vacation time and retirement plan usually apply also to part time employees. The number of vacation days can be exactly the same for both, but of course the pay for those days is less for a part-timer than for a full-timer, being in both cases proportional to their monthly salaries.

I voluntarily gave up my full time job five and half years ago, took one full year off for traveling and have been working approximately half time (20 hours / week) for the last four years. I've been very happy with my decision and have also considerably reduced my environmental impact during that time.

Sewing your own clothing

Posted by Mary at Mar 10, 2012 07:25 PM
Wow, if you think sewing your own clothing is going to save you money, I really haven't ever tried it. It makes me question the validity of your whole article.

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