these is the proposal to shorten the working week, usually by law. The
belief that it would “spread the work” and “give more jobs” was one
of the main reasons behind the inclusion of the penalty-overtime pro-
vision in the existing Federal Wage-Hour Law. The previous legisla-
tion in the States, forbidding the employment of women or minors
for more, say, than forty-eight hours a week, was based on the convic-
tion that longer hours were injurious to health and morale. Some of it
was based on the belief that longer hours were harmful to efficiency.
But the provision in the Federal law, that an employer must pay a
worker a 50 percent premium above his regular hourly rate of wages
for all hours worked in any week above forty, was not based primarily
on the belief that forty-five hours a week, say, was injurious either to
health or efficiency. It was inserted partly in the hope of boosting the
worker’s weekly income, and partly in the hope that, by discouraging
the employer from taking on anyone regularly for more than forty
hours a week, it would force him to employ additional workers
instead. At the time of writing this, there are many schemes for
“averting unemployment” by enacting a thirty-hour week.
What is the actual effect of such plans, whether enforced by indi-
vidual unions or by legislation? It will clarify the problem if we con-
sider two cases. The first is a reduction in the standard working week
from forty hours to thirty without any change in the hourly rate of
pay. The second is a reduction in the working week from forty hours
to thirty, but with a sufficient increase in hourly wage rates to main-
tain the same weekly pay for the individual workers already employed.
Let us take the first case. We assume that the working week is cut
from forty hours to thirty, with no change in hourly pay. If there is
substantial unemployment when this plan is put into effect, the plan
will no doubt provide additional jobs. We cannot assume that it will
provide sufficient additional jobs, however, to maintain the same pay-
rolls and the same number of man-hours as before, unless we make
the unlikely assumptions that in each industry there has been exactly
the same percentage of unemployment and that the new men and
women employed are no less efficient at their special tasks on the
average than those who had already been employed. But suppose we
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