What if cutting your work week to 30 hours could actually create more jobs AND save the planet? Economist Juliet Schor has run the numbers, and the results might flip everything you think you know about productivity. In this episode, Alex Romano breaks down her research showing how Americans' obsession with working longer hours is making everyone miserable while destroying the environment.
šÆ What You'll Learn:
⢠Why Germans work 400 fewer hours per year but report higher life satisfaction than Americans
⢠The math behind how a 30-hour work week could eliminate unemployment completely
⢠How your closet full of barely-worn clothes connects to climate change (spoiler: 70 pounds of waste per person annually)
⢠The energy savings possible when we buy local food instead of shipping lettuce across continents
š¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who's ever wondered if there's a smarter way to organize society than our current "work until you drop" culture.
š Chapters:
[00:00] Alex Romano introduces the radical idea that less work equals more prosperity
[02:15] Breaking down the American vs. German work-life balance experiment
[04:30] The unemployment solution hiding in plain sight
[06:45] Why we throw away perfectly good stuff and what it costs the planet
[08:30] Local food systems and the 90% energy reduction you've never heard about
[10:15] Practical steps to start working less while living better
Schor's research suggests we've been asking the wrong question. Instead of "how do we create more jobs?" maybe we should ask "how do we share the work we already have?" The answers might surprise you, especially when you see how much happier people become when they stop chasing stuff and start valuing time.
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š Topics: work life balance, sustainable economics, unemployment solutions, climate change, productivity myths
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Keywords: brain psychology, human behavior podcast, psychology podcast, cognitive science, brain research, decision making, science podcast
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