Author:
Mullens Francisca,Laurijssen Ilse
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Work hours are an important aspect of one’s job and these in turn have the potential to impact people’s well-being. Much research investigating the link between working hours and well-being uses cross-sectional data. Longitudinal studies, especially those studying the same subjects changing their working time, can study the impact of work time more clearly. Using panel data, this study aims to explore the impact of a reduction in working time on three domains of well-being: general well-being, job-related well-being (positive work experience) and work-family well-being (work-family conflict). In addition, our study offers insights into the role of concomitant changes in work and private circumstances of employees as we investigate whether the impact of shorter working hours for well-being is mediated by changes in the participants’ and circumstances related to paid and unpaid work resources.
Method
An organization of about 60 (female) employees trialed a shorter workweek for one calendar year in 2019. All full-time employees reduced their hours. The part-time working employees can be used as a control group. Panel data (survey and time-use diary data) of a 30-h workweek trial in Belgium was collected in four waves over two years in a pre- and post-intervention design. Change over time (waves) was analyzed through multilevel growth models.
Result
A decrease in work-family conflict was observed during the shorter workweek. Part of this decrease is explained by concomitant changes in work and private circumstances, such as sufficiency in free time, schedule control, and satisfaction with work pressure. Positive work experience and general well-being tend to have decreased during the shorter workweek, although this could partly be explained by other organizational changes and not by the reduction in working hours per se. Schedule control helped suppress these somewhat negative effects of organizational changes on positive work experience.
Conclusion
Reduced working hours have the largest and most positive impact on work-family conflict. The feeling of having enough leisure time contributes to this increased well-being. Especially for women, who were the majority in this study, a reduction in working time might be beneficial as they often bear more responsibility for household work and care tasks. Next to the duration of working time, schedule control/autonomy has an important impact on well-being.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference50 articles.
1. Anttila T, Nätti J, Väisänen M. The experiments of reduced working hours in Finland: impact on work-family interaction and the importance of the sociocultural setting. Community Work Fam. 2005;8(2):187–209. https://doi.org/10.1080/13668800500049704.
2. Anttila T. Reduced working hours: reshaping the duration, timing and tempo of work [Doctoral dissertation]. Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä; 2005.
3. Bader C, Hanbury HA, Neubert SF, Moser S. Weniger ist Mehr–Der dreifache Gewinn einer Reduktion der Erwerbsarbeitszeit. Weniger arbeiten als Transformationsstrategie für eine ökologischere, gerechtere und zufriedenere Gesellschaft–Implikationen für die Schweiz [Internet]. 2020. Available from: https://boris.unibe.ch/144160/1/CDE_Working_Paper_6_Bader_2020.pdf
4. Bannai A, Tamakoshi A. The association between long working hours and health: a systematic review of epidemiological evidence. Scand J Work Environ Health. 2014;40(1):5–18. https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.3388.
5. Barck-Holst P, Nilsonne Å, Åkerstedt T, Hellgren C. Reduced working hours and stress in the Swedish social services: A longitudinal study. International Social Work. 2017;60(4):897–913. https://doi.org/10.1177/0020872815580045