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Thirty-five Hours (Economic Self Destruction in France)
The Library of Economics and Liberty ^ | 15 June 2002 | Anthony de Jasay

Posted on 08/22/2002 1:04:49 PM PDT by Stultis

Thirty-five Hours

by Anthony de Jasay

July 15, 2002


In 1999, the socialist administration in France railroaded through a law reducing the "legal" work week from 39 to 35 hours with maintained weekly pay, and severely penalising overtime. This represented a rise of over 11 per cent in hourly labour costs, partly mitigated by a temporary reduction in employers' pension and health insurance contributions, the shortfall to be borne by the general taxpayer.

The measure was said to be a double achievement. It was a great leap forward in social progress, in the humanist transformation of the economy to serve man rather than profit, the advent of the rosy dawn of a better society. It was also a decisive battle won in the war against unemployment, a chronic ill with France being its second-worst victim among all the countries of Western Europe.

That shorter hours would increase employment was an evident logical consequence of the quantity theory of labour, which tells us, plausibly enough, that a given task will be performed either by fewer workers putting in longer hours or more workers putting in shorter ones. This, of course, is a mere truism, which implies (but in no way proves) that the task to be performed (i.e. producing total output) remains constant, just as the quantity theory of money is a mere truism unless it can demonstrate that the velocity of circulation of the relevant quantity remains constant, (or changes only in ways the theory can predict); both are deeply ingrained in the popular mind which unsurprisingly ignores the qualifier clause.

In order to cement the scientific foundations of the measure, the government requested the research department of the Bank of France to say by how much the shorter hours will increase total employment. The Bank came up with the figure of 700,000, adding the poker-faced rider that this is not a forecast, but merely the arithmetic product of applying the parameters supplied by the government. The media took no notice of the rider, still less of its tongue-in-cheek character. In a society less impervious to economics, the job-creating power of reducing the legal work week would have been laughed out of court, as indeed it has been at the time in both Germany and Italy. In a less statist society, the very idea of a legal work week, except perhaps for minors and pregnant women, would probably be regarded as weird, presumptuous and actually impertinent. However, much of French society thought the measure was at worst a good try, and was confidently awaiting its benign effects.

Early in 2002, with the unemployment rate back above 9 percent despite painfully contrived make-work schemes that put an additional 1.5 per cent or so of the working population on government payrolls, the minister of social affairs excused the rise in joblessness by explaining that the American slowdown was catching up with France and the dynamic job-creating effect of the thirty-five hour week has run its course. The official estimate of the total effect was somewhat over 300,000 extra jobs.

Anyone with a modicum of reasoning capacity must have rubbed his eyes in disbelief at this point. How could the government fail to see the blatantly obvious solution? If moving from 39 to 35 hours has done some good but not enough, the thing to do is clearly to move from 35 to 31 hours and if that will still not suffice, one must move calmly and confidently on to 27, 23 or whatever it takes to reach full employment. The mechanism must be as foolproof as the Laffer curve, which tells you that as you reduce tax rates, the tax yield increases and approaches a maximum. It is incomprehensible why the French government at this stage lost the courage of its convictions and failed to push on to full employment. It was bound to have been reached before the law bade everyone to stop working altogether.


In contrast to her great strengths in mathematics and engineering, France has produced few economists of note and shown little interest in those she did produce. If she had paid more attention to two of them, Jean-Baptiste Say and Frederic Bastiat, the thirty-five hour bill might not have passed and the present irreverent comments might not have been written. Say would have taught them that if everybody started to work less, the output of goods and the demand for labour would fall rather than remain constant. More originally, the shamefully neglected and underestimated Frederic Bastiat (who is almost totally unknown in France though moderately well respected in Germany and the United States) could have told them that in economic life there are "things you see and things you do not see". In his most brilliant essay "What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen", he anticipated the concept of opportunity cost and was, to my knowledge, the first economist ever to use and explain it. Reading Bastiat tells us, if nothing else did, that the opportunity cost of creating 300,000 jobs that we supposedly see, is the non-creation or abortion of an unknown, but perhaps much larger, number of jobs that would otherwise have been created in the private sector of the economy,—aborted jobs we did not see.

Nor will we ever see them, at least not these particular jobs. For the replacement of the socialist administration by a centre-right one will not do away with the thirty-five hours which, once on the statute book, has become sacrosanct, a shining milestone of progress along the road of historical necessity. At best, the restrictions on overtime working will be relaxed, but the "legal" work week will never be lengthened. Thirty-five hours have become politically correct, and anyone proposing to do away with it would be committing electoral suicide and be branded for what he was plainly seen to be, a despoiler of "workers' rights".

The strangest aspect of this strange story is that at most only a minority of people, mainly working mothers, have been made manifestly better off by this new "workers' right". A majority have been made worse off, but a majority would certainly vote against its repeal. Stranger still, if that is possible, is that this particular "right", i.e. the legal limitation of the work week, is not a right at all, but the deprivation of workers of their freedom of contract. The law suppresses their freedom to negotiate hours of work with prospective employers individually if possible, by collective bargaining if individual adjustment is not feasible. It is a truly amazing usage of English to call the suppression of an important freedom the extension of "rights,—a usage that seems to shock no one.

There is a strand of public choice theory that holds that at least in democracies, "society" gets the outcomes it prefers. If an outcome is preferred by the majority, it will vote for it. If it is wanted only by a minority interest group, it will be chosen provided the interest of the pressure group is strong enough and the majority relatively indifferent. I believe that my story of the thirty-five hour week is one illustration among many that this is not so. "Workers' Rights" of this kind, and the whole paternalistic redistributive apparatus of the welfare state, is the fundamental cause of the sluggish performance of these economies. Productivity growth in the last decade or more in these nations, which are hardly less clever and educated than Americans, has been half the American rate,—a divergence that, if it persists, should worry them deeply. Unemployment in the most welfarist of these welfare states is disgraceful. However, few people are really conscious of this cause-and-effect relation; and those who are often deny it even to themselves are whistling in the dark that the "European Model" is no less efficient, while in its humanism superior, to the American.

Such beliefs, so necessary for the preservation of European self-esteem along both halves of the political spectrum, are one reason why so many people do not opt for outcomes they would in effect prefer. Another and perhaps stronger reason is the hypnotic, mind-numbing power of the loose and cheap usage of language. The thirty-five hour week is a constraint, not a right. It is freely called a "workers' right",—the usage goes unchallenged and unpunished by derision—and "workers" hardly need to be told that more "rights" are better for them. Can they reasonably be expected to "see the things one does not see", namely the opportunity costs they incur?


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: anthonydejasay; economics; europe; europeansocialism; france; labor; socialism
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Visit this page on the website for links to other articles by de Jasay, including an online edition of his book The State.
1 posted on 08/22/2002 1:04:49 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: Stultis
With all the productivity gains from technology, why don't we get more time off? Do we want more stuff or more time?

Why is working 35 hours a week as opposed to 39 seen as a bad thing? I think the mandatory nature of it is irrational, but they must be thinking that it won't happen otherwise. Ideally, we'd all work about 24 hours a week with 12 weeks of total vacation.
2 posted on 08/22/2002 1:11:35 PM PDT by ReadMyMind
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To: sinkspur; Poohbah
Who's got the ping list for articles on economics?

Here's another article I recently posted that might be worthy of a ping:

Economic Classics (Bastiat, von Mises & Ropke rule this Joint Economic Committee webpage)

3 posted on 08/22/2002 1:14:02 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: ReadMyMind
Why is working 35 hours a week as opposed to 39 seen as a bad thing? I think the mandatory nature of it is irrational, but they must be thinking that it won't happen otherwise.

The mandatory nature is the whole point. The individual being being dictated to by the state as to whether more time off, as opposed to larger paychecks or wider employment opportunities, is a "good thing" or a "bad thing" is the whole point. In a free society whether shorter work weeks will "happen otherwise" will be determined by the labor market and the choices and priorities of agents within it.

4 posted on 08/22/2002 1:20:09 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: ReadMyMind
I'm an independent software consultant and I chose this profession because I have the right to decide how many hours a week/month/year that I want to work. I have the choice, not the STATE.
5 posted on 08/22/2002 1:25:48 PM PDT by Cobra64
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To: Cobra64
Amen! I'm a freelance writer (don't laugh--I have more work than I can handle every bloody week and the pay is probably better than many would surmise) and I completely concur with your statements.
6 posted on 08/22/2002 1:29:05 PM PDT by ECM
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To: Stultis
Someone asked the finance minister at the time, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, what the impact of the transition to 35 hours for the public sector workers would be. He responded, "Well it will be something of a shock, so we plan on phasing the move in gradually for the public sector, first going to 31 hours and only when they are used to that bumping it up to 32."
7 posted on 08/22/2002 1:29:41 PM PDT by babble-on
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To: ReadMyMind
Ideally, we'd all work about 24 hours a week with 12 weeks of total vacation.

Yes, and ideally we'd all love our jobs and there would be peace and prosperity the world over :)

8 posted on 08/22/2002 1:30:17 PM PDT by ECM
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To: Stultis
Seems almost a Socialism-lite. The masses work however the system dictates

and some of their income is spread to others that don't work via the government

through taxation.

Oh wait... thats only a hop, skip, and a jump from what we have now.

9 posted on 08/22/2002 1:34:56 PM PDT by DainBramage
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To: Stultis
Why don't the socialist surrendermonkeys see what they're doing to their economy I wonder? The French are turning into a footnote in history.
10 posted on 08/22/2002 1:35:55 PM PDT by WindMinstrel
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Advocates of the 35-hour week share with advocates of increases in mimimum wages a total ignorance of basic economics.

"France railroaded through a law reducing the "legal" work week from 39 to 35 hours with maintained weekly pay, and severely penalising overtime. This represented a rise of over 11 per cent in hourly labour costs"

So, for any of you who have taken Econ101. What will be the effect on the demand for labor of an 11% increase in its price?

That's right! When the price of something goes up, the quantity demanded will go ... DOWN!!! Resulting, over time, in fewer total hours worked. Companies will shift to less labor-intensive means of production. Purchase more equipment in order to increase productivity among existing workers. etc.

Letting policy makers create economic policy based on such a fundamental ignorance of basic science is tantamount to designing a new airplane without any consideration of the law of gravity.
11 posted on 08/22/2002 1:36:21 PM PDT by Calvin Coolidge
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To: Calvin Coolidge
it does have to be said that the frogs were not completely stupid. They are tricky people and they tricked their unions with this. They threw out the entire labor code with this law. Suddenly temporary work and part time non-union jobs started springing up. Also, the 35 hours is an average over the course of the year. So during quiet times of the year you can send people home with a 30 hour week and then make them work 45 hour weeks during the peak times, WITHOUT PAYING OVERTIME. Labor costs have not gone up dramatically in France. It was liberalization by stealth.
12 posted on 08/22/2002 1:47:29 PM PDT by babble-on
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To: babble-on
There's another trick whereby they split the work week paydate so they can work you 6 days in a row but without overtime 'cause it's "spread" over 2 weeks .

..legal?

certainly not ethical.

13 posted on 08/22/2002 2:07:28 PM PDT by norraad
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To: Stultis
That shorter hours would increase employment was an evident logical consequence of the quantity theory of labour, which tells us, plausibly enough, that a given task will be performed either by fewer workers putting in longer hours or more workers putting in shorter ones.

If they truly believed this, then it was inhumane to merely lower the legal work week to 35 hours. They should have lowered it to zero. That would have produced 100% unemployment and a productivity factor of infinity.

What could be better than that?

14 posted on 08/22/2002 2:23:49 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
I meant 100% employment.
15 posted on 08/22/2002 2:24:21 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Along with this they could raise the minimum wage to $100/hr. That way everybody would be rich and working full time.
16 posted on 08/22/2002 2:30:15 PM PDT by b-cubed
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To: babble-on
it does have to be said that the frogs were not completely stupid. They are tricky people and they tricked their unions with this. They threw out the entire labor code with this law. Suddenly temporary work and part time non-union jobs started springing up.

Very interesting observation. Please say more, if so inclined. Where are you getting your info?

17 posted on 08/22/2002 3:32:35 PM PDT by Stultis
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To: Stultis
The mechanism must be as foolproof as the Laffer curve, which tells you that as you reduce tax rates, the tax yield increases and approaches a maximum.

A great article except for this sentence. The Laffer curve says no such thing.

18 posted on 08/22/2002 4:04:00 PM PDT by Rodney King
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To: Stultis
In contrast to her great strengths in mathematics and engineering, France has produced few economists of note

Comparing the unemployment rates is tricky since they are calculated differently in different countries. The rate for USA discounts many of those who exhausted their benefits.

Same with taxes. In Europe the equivalents of Social Security, federal, state, local taxes are added up.

19 posted on 08/22/2002 4:20:11 PM PDT by A. Pole
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To: Stultis
http://www.35h.travail.gouv.fr/texteang.htm

this is from the French government (in english), and while they are bragging about how wonderful it was for the workers, it's not hard to read between the lines. They threw out a stultifyingly complex labor law dating from the 1970's and instead took labor negotiations down to the firm and even the factory level as opposed to nationwide collective bargaining. Overtime starts after 1600 hours of employment.

I analyze European economic policies for a little consulting firm for my job, so I get to travel and talk to some of these ministers and bureaucrats. The last Socialist government had some incredibly sneaky and intelligent people working for them. Look up Jean Pisani-Ferry in addition to Strauss-Kahn. They definitely understood what their problem was, but they also knew they would never be able to convince the public, so they tricked them instead. 35 hours was a Trojan horse. Unlike the German SPD, who talked centrist but governed Left, the PS especially in economic policy up until DSK left talked Left, but governed reformist. Its not an accident that France is outperforming Germany on every economic measure now.

20 posted on 08/22/2002 4:21:59 PM PDT by babble-on
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