Almost
half of Russian workers do not like the idea, believing wages will be cut.
Nearly
half of Russians say they wouldn't support a switch to a four-day work week
over fears that it would reduce their earnings, a new poll has said.
Earlier this month, Prime
Minister Dmitry Medvedev said that a shift to a four-day work week is “very
likely” to happen as a way to help workers overcome burnout and chronic
fatigue. Despite long hours at work, the Russian workforce’s productivity is among the lowest of the world’s major economies.
Forty-eight
percent of Russians oppose the idea of a four-day work week, according to a new
survey published by the state-run VTsIOM pollster on Monday, while
about one-third (29%) say they would have a positive reaction to a shortened
work week.
"Russians’ fears are
mainly associated with the likely [subsequent] reduction in income, which is
critical for pensioners and villagers — the
poorest and most vulnerable segments of the population,” Valery Fyodorov, the
head of VTsIOM, said. “Supporters of shorter work weeks, on the other hand,
expect to use their free time more productively and to improve the balance between
their work, leisure and personal life as a result.”
When
asked how the transition would affect their earnings, 82 percent of respondents
said a reduced working week would lead to lower salaries, while 15 percent said
it would have no effect on earnings.
Sixty-seven percent of Russians
also said that shortening the work week would lead to lower productivity, while
29% said it would improve productivity.
Residents of Moscow and St.
Petersburg and adults aged 25-34 were most likely to support a four-day work
week, the poll said.
VTsIOM conducted its survey
among 1,600 Russians aged 18 years and older across the country on June 13.
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