It comes as the push for companies to adopt a shorter working week crucially with no loss of pay while aiming for higher productivity gains momentum as a way of improving working conditions.
With work
changed forever by the pandemic, firms say shorter week could help attract and
retain staff
Over three
thousands workers at sixty companies across Britain will trial a four-day
working week, in what is thought to be the biggest pilot scheme to take place
anywhere in the world.
Employees
from a wide range of businesses and charities are expected to take part in the
scheme, which will run initially from June to December, including the Royal
Society of Biology, the London-based brewing company Pressure Drop, a
Manchester-based medical devices firm, and a fish and chip shop in Norfolk.
The pilot
is being run by academics at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, as well
as Boston College in the US, in partnership with the campaign group 4 Day Week
Global, the 4 Day Week UK Campaign and the Autonomy thinktank.
Launching
the trial to examine how such employment patterns might work at a broad range
of companies across the economy, the participation of 3,000 workers means it is
larger than a previous pilot in Iceland by Reykjavík city council and the
national government that included more than 2,500 workers.
The
research comes after the Covid pandemic led many people and companies to
re-examine their working patterns, with a marked rise in hybrid and flexible
practices that eschew the standard nine-to-five, five-day work week.
Joe
O’Connor, the chief executive of 4 Day Week Global, said there was no way to
“turn the clock back” to the pre-pandemic world. “Increasingly, managers and
executives are embracing a new model of work which focuses on quality of
outputs, not quantity of hours,” he said. “Workers have emerged from the
pandemic with different expectations around what constitutes a healthy
life-work balance.”
Other
companies to have tried the four-day week who are not part of the latest trial
include the FTSE 100 consumer goods firm Unilever, the Japanese electronics
firm Panasonic, and London’s app-based Atom Bank.
Mark
Downs, the chief executive of the Royal Society of Biology, said the decision
to trial the four-day week was partly a response to an “incredibly competitive”
labour market.
“It’s
about trying to do more to be a good, innovative employer to attract and retain
our current staff,” he said. “These sorts of possibilities make a massive
difference. It’s great for everybody.”
The
society’s 35 staff mostly work in King’s Cross, London, but some have moved to
remote working during the pandemic. Employees were told about the trial last
week and responses so far have been universally positive, Downs said.
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