logo
#

Latest news with #BrendanBurchell

Four-day week ‘will be normal in 10 years' despite ‘vicious' backlash after UK's biggest pilot, professor says
Four-day week ‘will be normal in 10 years' despite ‘vicious' backlash after UK's biggest pilot, professor says

The Sun

time01-08-2025

  • Business
  • The Sun

Four-day week ‘will be normal in 10 years' despite ‘vicious' backlash after UK's biggest pilot, professor says

A FOUR-DAY week is set to "be the norm" within a decade despite "vicious" backlash from opponents, according to one expert. Professor Brendan Burchell, an expert on labour markets and a fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge, stated the shift towards the condensed working schedule is already in motion. 1 'In ten years' time, a four-day week will be the norm,' he told The Times. 'If any organisation advertises a five-day role, no one will apply — why would you?' The UK's most extensive public-sector pilot, by South Cambridgeshire district council, has reported improvements in recruitment, cost savings of nearly half a million pounds a year and without a drop in worker performance. Burchell added that the five-day week is so baked into the culture of work in the UK, which is why it is yet to be implemented. 'The idea that you can reduce hours by 20 per cent and maintain output sounds too good to be true,' he said. 'But case after case, that's exactly what we're seeing.' 'The work ethic is incredibly deeply embedded. 'People see being busy as virtuous.' However, Burchell conceded not all professions would be able to benefit from the four-day working week - especially frontline workers. 'You need to think about how the whole system changes,' he says. I earn £10k a month doing a job no one wants - I only have to work half the year & get to travel the world 'And remember, a lot of the people who are economically inactive are qualified professionals who left because the job became intolerable.' 'Our great-grandparents did in a week what we now do in a day. So why are we still working the same hours?' WORK IT OUT It comes as after the full list of firms offering a four-day week was revealed, as experts hail "there is no turning back." Since April 2024, workers have a right to ask for flexible work but firms do not have to agree. As of July 2025, over 230 companies across the UK offer employees the chance to work a shorter week, according to research by the 4 Day Week Foundation. This is an increase of 35 more firms, compared to previous research carried out at the end of last year. The organisation recently concluded its latest pilot with a 100% success rate. The six-month trial began last November and 17 companies took part in the study. Alan Brunt, chief executive of Bron Afon Community Housing with 420 staff, who are extending their pilot further, said: 'Almost as soon as we started talking about it, our teams got together to set about making it work which was brilliant. 'We've closely monitored our performance and customer satisfaction. We're happy with the results so far and will continue to make sure we're delivering for our customers. 'I expect that most organisations will be doing this in the next 10 years or so.'

Four-day week ‘will be the norm in ten years'
Four-day week ‘will be the norm in ten years'

Times

time01-08-2025

  • Business
  • Times

Four-day week ‘will be the norm in ten years'

Professor Brendan Burchell's tranquil office on a Cambridge University staircase seems an unlikely staging ground for a revolution in how we live and earn, but his research may help transform how — and how much — the country works. Burchell, an expert on labour markets and a fellow of Magdalene College, is a key voice in the growing debate over the merits of a four-day week. As trials proliferate across both the private and public sectors, he believes that a shift has begun. 'In ten years' time, a four-day week will be the norm,' he predicts. 'If any organisation advertises a five-day role, no one will apply — why would you?' For two years, the veteran sociologist has been studying the UK's most extensive public-sector pilot, run by South Cambridgeshire district council. The data now spans 27 months. The results are, in Burchell's words, 'phenomenal'. The council has reported improvements in staff recruitment and retention, cost savings estimated at £400,000 a year and better or stable performance on most of the services that were monitored — all while employees worked one day less every week with no loss of pay. The scheme, which the council voted last month to make permanent, follows the so-called 100-80-100 model: 100 per cent of pay, 80 per cent of the hours, 100 per cent of the original productivity. It is not about squeezing the hours of a conventional working week into fewer, longer days and it covers the entire workforce. These details seem important. Burchell's research has shown that benefits to worker wellbeing diminish if a shorter working week involves a pay cut, or if most of your colleagues still work five days. His findings also suggest that the mental health benefits of work plateau after surprisingly few hours. In 2019, he published a study exploring the idea of an 'optimal dose' of employment. Unexpectedly, the data suggested that one day a week was enough to confer the psychological rewards associated with work, which stem from structured routines, social connections, the sense of contributing to a collective venture and building an identity. 'It doesn't have to be a great job,' he says. 'Even average jobs are good for you — but only up to a point.' In South Cambridgeshire, critics — including Conservative councillors — have argued that the four-day week shortchanges taxpayers while making it harder to deliver for residents. But a recent report co-authored by Burchell suggested that the feared drop in productivity had not materialised. 'The idea that you can reduce hours by 20 per cent and maintain output sounds too good to be true,' he concedes. 'But case after case, that's exactly what we're seeing.' So what is holding Britain back? Partly, he believes, it is culture. 'The work ethic is incredibly deeply embedded,' he says. 'People see being busy as virtuous.' This mindset, rooted in centuries of Protestant tradition and reinforced by the modern cult of productivity, may, he says, help to explain the criticism the South Cambridgeshire trial has encountered. Although early media coverage of private-sector trials was largely positive, the council faced fierce political attacks. Burchell describes the scrutiny as 'vicious', a backlash that has chilled interest among other local authorities. Around the world, though, from Portugal to South Africa, companies and institutions are trialling four-day weeks and announcing positive results. In the UK, the model is gaining momentum among companies grappling with recruitment challenges, burnout and low morale. Burchell is now collaborating with health economists to explore applications within the NHS, where recruitment crises and burnout are endemic. • The Times View: Four-day week for council workers sets a disastrous example He acknowledges that not all jobs fit neatly into the four-day model. Nurses, delivery drivers and other frontline workers cannot drop a day without adjustments elsewhere. But he argues that change is still feasible. 'You need to think about how the whole system changes,' he says. 'And remember, a lot of the people who are economically inactive are qualified professionals who left because the job became intolerable.' It was only in the mid-20th century that the UK transitioned from a six-day to a five-day week, a change that was met with furious resistance at the time but is now taken for granted. Burchell suspects we are now at a similar crossroads. 'Our great-grandparents did in a week what we now do in a day. So why are we still working the same hours?' he asks. Part of the answer may lie in consumer culture, rising housing costs and entrenched managerial models. But Burchell suspects something deeper is also at play: a collective inability to reimagine how we divide our time. 'Most of us,' he says, 'still think of the five-day week as natural, as if it's encoded in the human condition. It's not.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store