The Case for a Shorter Working Week: A Necessary Change

A diverse group of people participating in a peaceful protest, holding banners advocating for a shorter working week, fair pay, and work-life balance, with a focus on the '4 Day Week' message.

For more than a century, every major advance in working time has followed the same pattern: workers demand change, employers resist it, the right‑wing press declares it impossible — and then, once won, society quietly accepts it as common sense. The eight‑hour day, the weekend, paid holidays, maternity leave: all were once dismissed as utopian fantasies. Today they are the bedrock of modern working life.

The campaign for a shorter working week — including the four‑day week — sits squarely in that tradition. And as the Morning Star reported from the CWU conference on 13 May 2026, the movement is gathering real momentum.

Delegates packed into a fringe meeting to hear how unions can push the issue forward. Phil Lindsey of the Four Day Week campaign reminded workers that the backlash we see today is nothing new. As he put it, the scepticism in the right‑wing press “mirrored the long demolished arguments over the five‑day week a century ago.” The same tired warnings, the same manufactured panic, the same insistence that workers must accept exhaustion as the price of economic survival.

But history is not on the side of the sceptics.

A shorter week is not radical — the status quo is

CWU T&FSE’s Mel Wilson cut through the noise with a clarity that resonated far beyond the conference hall. “A shorter working week isn’t radical,” she said. “What’s radical is expecting workers to absorb constant change, rising pressure and longer demands without giving them anything back.”

That line captures the heart of the debate. The real extremism is the idea that work should expand endlessly while wages stagnate, stress rises, and the boundaries between labour and life dissolve. The radicalism lies in the demand that workers simply endure more — more pressure, more surveillance, more targets, more burnout — while receiving less in return.

Wilson went further: “This campaign is about fairness. It’s about dignity. It’s about balance. It’s about taking back control of our time.” In those words is the essence of trade unionism: the fight not only for pay, but for the quality of life that pay is meant to support.

The economic case: productivity follows wellbeing

The evidence from global trials is clear. When workers have more rest, more autonomy, and more time to live their lives, productivity rises. Absenteeism falls. Staff retention improves. Creativity increases. Companies save money. Workers gain time.

This is not a zero‑sum game. It is a rebalancing of a system that has drifted into dysfunction.

Phil Lindsey pointed out that “at the start of 2027, there’s two big names starting trials of a four‑day week as a result of worker campaigns hard for but well won.” That matters. When major employers shift, the political and cultural landscape shifts with them. What was once fringe becomes feasible. What was once feasible becomes inevitable.

The social case: time is a public good

A shorter working week is not only an economic reform — it is a social one. It strengthens families, supports carers, improves mental health, and gives people the time to participate in civic life. It reduces carbon emissions by cutting commuting. It opens space for education, volunteering, and community involvement.

In an age of rising loneliness, collapsing public services, and fraying social bonds, time is not a luxury. It is infrastructure.

The political case: workers must set the agenda

The labour movement has always been strongest when it articulates a vision of the future, not merely a defence of the present. The shorter working week is such a vision — a concrete, winnable demand that speaks to millions of workers who feel squeezed, exhausted, and unheard.

The CWU delegates understood this. The packed fringe meeting was not just a discussion; it was a signal. Workers are ready for this fight. They know that the economy is not a natural force but a human creation — and that working time is a political choice.

As Wilson told the room: “If we organise and build across every workplace, we can win this.” That is not rhetoric. It is a strategy.

A movement whose time has come

The shorter working week is not a dream. It is a practical, evidence‑based reform supported by workers, economists, and forward‑thinking employers. It is a response to a world where technology has increased productivity but the benefits have not been shared. It is a corrective to decades of intensification and burnout. It is a demand rooted in fairness, dignity, and the belief that life should be more than labour.

The CWU conference showed that the movement is no longer theoretical. It is organised. It is growing. And it is winnable.

The question is no longer whether we can afford a shorter working week.
The question is whether we can afford not to win it.

By Maria Camara

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