this post was submitted on 14 Mar 2024
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[–] [email protected] 14 points 9 months ago

What the fuck. I refuse to believe this improves company profits in 90% of the companies.

It doesn't. Hundreds of industry studies have been done, and they all point to the same conclusion. 40 hours of work is the absolute maximum you can squeeze out of a worker before you start to see productivity and quality take a sharp nosedive. Doesn't matter if you're a factory worker or an office drone, fatigue will set in and give increasingly diminished returns for every hour over that. 40 hour work weeks only became the standard across the United States because of Henry Ford actually listening to the people doing these studies.

I think part of the reason we haven't shifted more towards a more balanced 30 hour work week despite the absolutely massive increase in productivity thanks to computerization and automation is because management positions attract individuals who strongly believe that more effort = more results, and that probably rings true for managerial positions where the most alpha-minded ones who work extra hard above and beyond the job's expectations are the ones to typically get the promotions and thus become industry leaders themselves in time.

Consider how much time people spend on Facebook or TikTok or whatever while on the job. Consider how much time is spent "looking busy" when in reality you might just be dragging out the task you are on so that you are not assigned more busywork. This is all a product of people having jobs that demand they be present and paid for 40 hours worth of labor, but a great deal of it is "performative labor" where they are not actually producing, but can't afford to clock out early because wages are based on how long you are at work, and rarely commission based, so there's no incentive to produce more for the same pay so long as you are meeting expectations/quotas.