Sep 24th
2013, 12:19 by C.W. and A.J.K.D. | LONDON
The
Econimist
BERTRAND
RUSSELL, the English philosopher, was not a fan of work. In his 1932 essay, “In
Praise of Idleness”, he reckoned that if society were better managed the average
person would only need to work four hours a day. Such a small working day would
“entitle a man to the necessities and elementary comforts of life.” The rest of
the day could be devoted to the pursuit of science, painting and writing.
Russell
thought that technological advancement could free people from toil. John
Maynard Keynes mooted a similar idea in a 1930 essay, "Economic
possibilities for our grandchildren", in which he reckoned people might
need work no more than 15 hours per week by 2030. But over eighty years after
these speculations people seem to be working harder than ever. The Financial
Times reports today that Workaholics Anonymous groups are taking off. Over the
summer Bank of America faced intense criticism after a Stakhanovite intern died.
But data
from the OECD, a club of rich countries, tell a more positive story. For the
countries for which data are available the vast majority of people work fewer
hours than they did in 1990:
And it
seems that more productive—and, consequently, better-paid—workers put in less
time in at the office. The Greeks are some of the most hardworking in the OECD,
putting in over 2,000 hours a year on average. Germans, on the other hand, are
comparative slackers, working about 1,400 hours each year. But German productivity
is about 70% higher.
One
important question concerns whether appetite for work actually diminishes as
people earn more. There are countervailing effects. On the one hand, a higher
wage raises the opportunity cost of leisure time and should lead people to work
more. On the other hand, a higher income should lead a worker to consume more
of the stuff he or she enjoys, which presumably includes leisure.
Some
research shows that higher pay does not, on net, lead workers to do more.
Rather, they may work less. A famous study by Colin Camerer and colleagues,
which looked at taxi drivers, reached a controversial conclusion. The authors
suggested that taxi drivers had a daily income "target", and that:
“When wages
are high, drivers will reach their target more quickly and quit early; on
low-wage days they will drive longer hours to reach the target.”
Alternatively, the quote above might suggest
that people who work fewer hours are more productive. This idea is not new.
Adam Smith reckoned that
[T]he man
who works so moderately as to be able to work constantly, not only preserves
his health the longest, but in the course of the year, executes the greatest
quantity of works.
There are
aberrations, of course. Americans are relatively productive and work relatively
long hours. And within the American labour force hours worked among the rich
have risen while those of the poor have fallen. But a paper released yesterday
by the New Zealand Productivity Commission showed that even if you work more
hours, you do not necessarily work better. The paper made envious comparisons
between Kiwis and Australians—the latter group has more efficient workers.
So maybe we
should be more self-critical about how much we work. Working less may make us
more productive. And, as Russell argued, working less will guarantee “happiness
and joy of life, instead of frayed nerves, weariness, and dyspepsia".
Write more, thats all I have to say. Literally, it seems as though you relied on the video
ReplyDeleteto make your point. You obviously know what youre talking
about, why throw away your intelligence on just
posting videos to your blog when you could be giving us something enlightening
to read?
Here is my blog post ... Minecraft.Net