Policy Snapshot
Shortened Work Weeks
Reduced working hours to distribute work more evenly and convert productivity gains into leisure.
Rate of Disruption
Risk Horizon
Governance
Decision Maker
Shortened Work Weeks
Reduced standard working hours to spread available work more evenly, improve worker well‑being, and ensure that productivity gains from AI translate into time dividends for workers.
What it is:
Shortened work week policies reduce the statutory or conventional full-time work standard while aiming to preserve wages and benefits. The underlying rationale is that if the same output can be produced in fewer hours, workers should receive some of that productivity gain as time rather than having it captured entirely as profit or passed through as lower prices. Governments can support this shift through changes to labor law (such as redefining full-time status and lowering overtime thresholds), targeted subsidies or tax credits for firms that adopt shorter weeks without pay cuts, and public sector leadership where state agencies pilot reduced hours as a model for the broader economy.
If AI substantially increases output per worker, shortened work weeks offer a mechanism for distributing that productivity gain broadly rather than concentrating it among capital owners or a shrinking number of highly productive workers. Rather than a world where some people work full-time and others are unemployed, shorter standard hours spread available work more evenly across the labor force — maintaining employment relationships, preserving access to employer-provided benefits, and giving workers time to invest in retraining, caregiving, or civic participation.
The main challenges are economic and practical. Unless productivity gains are large enough to fully offset the reduction in hours, employers face higher per-unit labor costs — potentially reducing competitiveness, especially for firms competing internationally against countries with longer standard hours. There is also a risk that reduced hours become a form of underemployment if wages are not genuinely maintained. The benefits may also flow disproportionately to salaried white-collar workers whose output is less tied to hours, while hourly and shift workers see their take-home pay fall. And if the policy is adopted through mandate rather than negotiation, firms may respond by accelerating automation to avoid the higher effective cost of labor, potentially worsening the displacement it was designed to cushion.
Recommended Reading:
Juliet Schor
Four Days a Week
June 2025
Schor argues that AI-driven productivity gains create a real opportunity to reduce work time, but that technology alone does not produce shorter hours; long work weeks are the result of institutional choices, not inevitability. She points to the four-day (32-hour) week as a plausible anchor for channeling productivity gains into broad-based leisure rather than allowing those gains to flow primarily to capital owners or fuel further consumption, drawing on research from hundreds of companies that implemented reduced hours while maintaining pay and productivity.
The Autonomy Institute
November 2023
The UK‑based think tank has produced detailed analyses of working‑time reduction scenarios, including modeling national‑level transitions to 32‑hour weeks and evaluating large‑scale pilots. Their work emphasizes that AI and digitalization can decouple output from hours worked, arguing that without deliberate policy, these gains will disproportionately accrue to capital owners rather than manifesting as shorter, healthier work lives for the majority of workers.
Bernie Sanders
Thirty-Two Hour Workweek Act
April 2024
Sanders argues for a legislated shift to a 32‑hour workweek with no loss of pay as a distributional response to rising productivity and inequality, explicitly tying the case to AI and robotics as accelerants of economic transformation. His proposed Thirty-Two Hour Workweek Act aims to reduce the standard workweek from 40 to 32 hours over four years by lowering overtime thresholds, mandating increased pay for long workdays, and protecting employees' existing wages and benefits from any reduction.
Real-world precedents:
The Netherlands, Denmark, and Germany demonstrate that shorter workweeks are sustainable in high-income economies, with average weekly hours for employees ranging from 32.1 to 34.7 as of 2023.
These norms are increasingly supported by four-day week pilots that report high organizational retention and productivity stability, as well as work-sharing and short-time compensation frameworks that allow firms to reduce hours instead of jobs during periods of disruption.
Germany’s Kurzarbeit scheme illustrates how social insurance can support hours-reduction.