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30 sats \ 2 replies \ @Undisciplined 7h \ parent \ on: IF there was UBI who would fund it? econ
This was the first relevant search result. People seem to have worked fewer hours as the Industrial Revolution unfolded, stabilizing around the modern 40 hours for the past 80 years or so. It may depend on just how revolutionary we expect this productivity gain to be.
A very recent trend, that's entirely new for labor economists, is that male labor force participation has begun declining. My advisor liked to joke about how simple men were to model in labor: "They work as much as they can and then they die."
Hmm, interesting that it's been stable even through the computer and internet revolutions... which is where I think I was getting my thoughts about this from.
Hard to say how much of it is driven by market supply & demand vs. regulatory distortions. (Not sure if the 40 hour work week has any regulatory significance)
As to male labor force decline, I think I read that it correlates well with disability claims and video games.
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Yeah, video games are one of the leading explanations.
During the New Deal (I think), a bunch of labor regulations were put in place that somewhat entrenched the 40 hour work week.
As with much government do-goodery, a long-running beneficial trend stopped as soon as the government decided to help.
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