Good Practice
The 4-Day Week — La semaine en 4 jours
A major working time reform implemented on 1st January 2024, offering eligible municipal staff the possibility of working 35 hours over four longer days (without compensatory rest days), to improve work-life balance and quality of life at work.
POLICY OBJECTIVE
- To propose an innovative work model that meets staff’s new expectations while maintaining the quality of public service.
- To allow experimentation on a population with the widest possible variety of professions, particularly those not eligible for remote work.
- To offer part-time staff the possibility of returning to full-time work and receiving their full remuneration without losing the benefit of their weekly rest day.
- To improve the quality of life at work and the work-life balance.
CONTEXT
The policy was initiated to respond to new staff expectations regarding work organisation. It starts from the foundation of a high workload and seeks to use the new model as a form of recognition for particularly committed staff, helping to prevent burnout.
POLICY DESCRIPTION
The 4-day work week is one of four new work cycles offered to eligible staff as part of a major working time reform implemented on 1st January 2024.
- Formula: 35 hours per week over 4 days (with no compensatory leave).
- Daily Work: The day is longer than 8 hours and 45 minutes, with one fixed rest day.
- Management: The scheme is based on trust, responsibility of staff, motivation, and collective intelligence. It is used as a management tool to recognise staff and prevent professional exhaustion.
KEY ASPECTS
- Targeting Diverse Roles: The experiment was deliberately opened to varied roles, including those that are not eligible for remote working (a key innovation).
- Reconciling Part-Time & Full-Time: The system allows part-time employees (10 participants) to return to full-time work, regaining full pay while retaining a weekly rest day—a significant benefit.
- Conditions for Success: Participants commonly share a high workload, autonomy in work organisation, and manager trust/recognition.
- Efficiency: The 4-day week, often coupled with remote work, leads to better efficiency and requires more rigour in organisation, ultimately generating less stress despite the longer working days.
- Organisational Impact: Managers note limited impacts on planning and a stronger sense of responsibility among teams, leading to a search for work time optimisation (e.g., reducing meeting times).
RESULTS
- Participation: 60 volunteer staff out of 4,100 eligible staff (2% of staff on variable hours).
- Staff Profile: The largest participating group is executive staff (Category A: 44%), followed by Category C (32%). 58% are from the administrative sector.
- Well-being (Unanimous): Staff report feeling less tired, especially when the free day is next to a weekend (3-day rest). There is a double effect of relief on family life and health.
- Free Day Use: The free day is highly valued, mainly used for oneself and family, facilitating the spreading of personal logistics over three days instead of two.
- Wednesday is notably chosen more by women, potentially linked to childcare.
- Service Quality: Staff have a clear sense that the quality of public service is maintained at their level.
- Health: Occupational medicine recorded positive feedback from staff.
- Financial Impact: Participants who returned to full-time work experienced an increase in purchasing power.
Béatrice
Soldati
Officer for Working Time and Telework
Human Resource Direction
