Six-hour day

The six-hour day is a schedule by which the employees or other members of an institution (which may also be, for example, a school) spend six hours contributing. This is in contrast to the widespread eight-hour day, or any other time arrangement. It has also been proposed as a better alternative to the four-day week, another proposed way to reduce working time.[1]

Examples

Sweden

Several small-scale implementations of the concept have been trialled in Sweden, including the private and public sectors.[2] In Gothenburg, an experiment with 70 nurses over 18 months found decreases in sick leave, better self-reported health as well as an increase in productivity, with a cost of 1,3 million USD.[3]

gollark: Unfortunately, I lack the power to change people's nicknames to LyricLy.
gollark: I still am Lyricly, in fact.
gollark: This has been known to occur sometimes, yes.
gollark: It's on osmarks.net. Please keep up.
gollark: Mostly, things just go into our fully automated internal market systems™, which then, due to the efficient market hypothesis, return the right answer.

References

  1. Veal, Anthony (2020-01-13). "Time's up for the 9-to-5 — a six-hour working day is the future". ABC News. Retrieved 2020-01-16.
  2. Savage, Maddy (2015-11-02). "The truth about Sweden's short working hours". Retrieved 2020-01-16.
  3. Savage, Maddy (2017-02-08). "What really happened when Swedes tried six-hour days?". Retrieved 2020-01-16.
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