National Review Online
Monday,
March 18, 2024
Senator
Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) wants everyone to get paid the same for doing
less work. Many entrepreneurs throughout human history have wanted this same
goal. In fact, they set their sights higher, wanting everyone to get paid more for
doing less work. So they invented various labor-saving devices that allow
humans to get more done in less time.
About
200 years ago, entrepreneurs in northwestern Europe really got going on these
labor-saving devices and eventually spread them throughout the world. We now
call this process, still playing out in poorer countries, the “industrial
revolution.” It didn’t just make people twice as wealthy, or ten times as
wealthy. Average people today are 30 times wealthier, in real terms, than they
were before the industrial revolution.
That
means that instead of having your entire family, including young children,
working 80 or more hours a week on a farm just to grow enough food to not
starve, you can work 40 hours a week while your spouse works part-time or not
at all and your kids go to school until they’re at least 18, maybe 22 or older.
And you aren’t doing any work that will cause injury; no, the greater health
concerns for workers in modern industrialized countries relate to being too
sedentary.
In
many cases, you can do all this work that your ancestors wouldn’t even
recognize as such while listening to music from any period of human history.
You can do it in the comfort of air-conditioning, which follows you even while
moving from place to place because you own a car that allows you to travel over
long distances whenever you want. You can drive it to a grocery store with at
minimum 30,000 different items in it, from all over the world, sold by people
who look at a pack of name-brand English muffins (invented in the U.S. in 1894)
selling for $4, say, “No, that’s too much,” and create their own generic-brand
version for $1.50.
Was
the unbelievable prosperity of the industrialized world inevitable? Absolutely
not. A bunch of people over many years in many countries worked very hard to
come up with new ideas and turn them into products and processes that would
generate so much wealth that nobody has to be a peasant anymore.
There
were lots of challenges along the way, including things such as pollution,
dangerous working conditions, and cramped, unhygienic cities. But the
industrial revolution has thrown off so much wealth that there’s enough left
over to solve those problems too without sacrificing the higher living
standards that come with it.
So
what is Sanders’s plan to contribute to the great human endeavor of becoming
wealthier while working less? Does he have an idea for the next automobile, a
better management strategy, or the power loom for the 22nd century?
No,
Sanders wants to write words on a page and have a couple hundred people vote
for it. He has introduced a bill to mandate a 32-hour work week “with no loss
in pay.” It would amend the Fair Labor Standards Act to reduce the definition
of full-time work from 40 hours per week to 32 hours. Pay wouldn’t go down
because the bill says employers “may not reduce the total workweek compensation
rate.”
That’s
Sanders’s idea of progress. Pass a law that says everyone gets paid the same
for doing less work, and then it happens. Done. Easy. The only reason it
doesn’t happen is the greedy corporations.
“While
CEOs are making nearly 350x as much as their employees, workers are missing
their kids’ birthday parties and little league games…and many of them,
STILL [sic] do not have enough money to pay the rent,” Sanders
posted on social media in support of his bill.
Never
mind that, according to a study published in 2018 in the Harvard
Business Review, the super-wealthy CEOs working for major companies work
62.5 hours per week on average and work on 79 percent of weekend days and 70
percent of vacation days. If it’s really true that all we need to do to work
less is pass a law, why is Sanders stopping at 32 hours?
If
we only worked 30 hours a week for the same pay, we’d have even more time for
birthday parties and little-league games. Sanders has noted, correctly, that
American workers are 400 percent more productive today than they were in the
1940s. So why aren’t we only working eight hours per week? Is Sanders a
corporate shill, forcing us all to still work 24 unnecessary hours per week to
feed the greed of the C-suite?
People
have been predicting short work weeks for years. In 1930, John Maynard Keynes
thought we’d have 15-hour work weeks by now. In truth, we do work a little
less. Average weekly working hours per worker has declined from about 39 in
1951 to about 34 today. But Keynes and everyone else who has made similar
predictions forgets that humans have infinite wants.
We
could easily produce 1950s levels of output only working a few hours per week.
But that would mean 1950s levels of technology, 1950s levels of poverty, 1950s
levels of housing, 1950s levels of air-conditioning, 1950s levels of food
quality and variety — and it turns out nobody really wants that. So we keep
working, and innovating, so we can be better off, not just as well off.
And
more fundamentally, work isn’t something that humans put up with to get stuff.
Yes, it’s something we strive to make easier. But working hard is a core part
of being human. Maybe if you’re an 82-year-old socialist who has only worked in
politics your entire life, you lose touch with what it means to be a productive
member of society. But for the rest of us, we wouldn’t eliminate work even if
we could.
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