From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Jacinda Ardern Calls for Four-Day Week: No Wonder She's Popular
Date May 23, 2020 2:04 AM
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[Ardern’s idea upends four decades of neoliberal insistence that
workplace ‘flexibility’ is the purview only of employers]
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JACINDA ARDERN CALLS FOR FOUR-DAY WEEK: NO WONDER SHE'S POPULAR  
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Jacinda Ardern Calls for Four-Day Week: No Wonder She's Popular
May 20, 2020
The Guardian
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_ Ardern’s idea upends four decades of neoliberal insistence that
workplace ‘flexibility’ is the purview only of employers _

New Zealand Labour Prime Minister is resetting the conversation about
how work should be organized, Getty Images

 

The popularity of New Zealand’s Labour prime minister, Jacinda
Ardern, is, presently, stratospheric
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With the confidence of popularity, her government is positioned to
promote political ideas that were almost beyond imagination only a few
months ago. One of them, mooted on Wednesday, is encouraging the
country into a four-day working week.

Ardern’s leadership of New Zealand through the coronavirus crisis
has compounded credentials well established by her government’s deft
and empathetic handling of the horrific massacre in Christchurch last
year. When corona hit, the lockdown of the country was swift,
draconian and effective; there have only been 21 deaths from the
disease to date in New Zealand, and while the rest of the world
grapples with a rising number of daily cases
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no new cases have been reported in New Zealand in three days.

A mind-boggling 92% of New Zealanders laud their government’s
containment efforts. According to latest polls, Ardern is the most
popular party leader there in more than 100 years.

With an impending opportunity to restructure the New Zealand economy
for post-corona reopening, Ardern is exploring a policy suite of
uncommon ambition. Hard-hit tourism
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New Zealand’s largest export industry, employing 15% of New
Zealanders and contributing to almost 6% of GDP, and it was in the
context of rescuing this industry that on Wednesday Ardern suggested
– informally, in a Facebook Live video from the tourist town of
Rotorua – that, should the country move to a four-day working week,
more leisure time may allow the domestic tourist market to expand to
meet the present shortfall.
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The phrasing was careful. “I hear lots of people suggesting we
should have a four-day work week. Ultimately that really sits between
employers and employees,” Ardern said.

But the mere suggestion has “excited New Zealanders”
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as well as exciting a ready audience of the corona generation around
the world. When Ardern explained that “there’s just so much
we’ve learned about … [the flexibility] of people working from
home, the productivity that can be driven out of that”, she was
speaking to the lived, material reality of the most physically
transformed workplaces in living western memory.

Because across the world, social distancing has resulted not only in
record numbers of people working from home. It has staggered and
rearranged shifts, reorganising the deployment of labour around
continually improvised new systems of production, distribution and
exchange demanded in a health and economic crisis. Economists have
called it the biggest workforce change since the second world war,
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parallel to the ongoing horror of managing an invisible, lethal virus
that underscores every rearrangement, for some workers there have been
surprising benefits.

It’s usually in the secrecy of social media group chats you’ll
read the most explicit admissions from people – and a little guilt
– that they’re enjoying the new schedules and enforced time at
home. Parents may find the juggle of home-schooling their kids with
work commitments challenging, but many are appreciating more time with
their children.

In a workplace culture that in so many places still – still –
operates around a culturally persistent male-breadwinner model
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distances men from caring responsibilities in the home, many men are
gaining closeness and meaning from greater daily involvement with
their kids.

Women are seeing practical opportunities materialise for post-Covid-19
employment with genuine flexibility for meeting care commitments.
Those who seem to be doing the best psychologically
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of these extreme times are those whose days now accommodate doing
things for the community, and acts of care. In my own experience, my
partner and I are happier in ourselves and our relationship for losing
the stress of our commute and spending more time in our own home
together.

A universal four-day week in itself is no panacea for relationships,
workplace frustration, for rescuing an economy or for meeting every
household’s care commitments – but it’s Ardern’s suggestion
that it be considered within a mix of work changes by employers
that’s important here. There’s no doubt that there are workers who
would thrive in a four-day week – but there are others who’d
prosper through more shifts but with fewer hours, those who’d be
happier working full-time from home, others who’d be most productive
through a different combination of conditions.

But what can and will provide the capital injection needed to revive
economies, a boost in productivity and the potential for a real
work-life balance for working people lies in the twinned scenarios a
four-day week inherently proposes. The first is adjusting pay-scales
to provide the equivalent of a living wage based upon four days of
full-time labour, which would both allow underemployment to be
liveable and to flush greater spending towards consumer markets that
are suffering. The second is a new workplace paradigm that Ardern’s
casual menu of ideas politically suggests: one that upends four
decades of neoliberal insistence that workplace “flexibility
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is the purview only of employers, replacing it with a truly
social-democratic flexibility that serves, through working people, the
households and communities that their jobs support.

Among a claque of western leaders yearning for “snap back” to the
way things were before the virus – some pursuing “recovery”
strategies of even lesser benefit
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it’s New Zealand’s, conspicuously, who repeatedly shows the
courage to snap forward. Little wonder she has become so popular.

_• Van Badham is a Guardian Australia columnist_

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