Working Time and the Impact of Policy Institutions: Reforming the Overtime Hours Law and Regulation
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Review of Social Economy
- Vol. 56 (4) , 522-541
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00346769800000048
Abstract
This paper analyzes implications for worker well-being if legislation in the U.S. Congress is passed permitting employers and non-supervisory employees who agree to substitute future compensatory time off in lieu of premium pay for overtime work, calculated over an 80-hour two-week standard. The impact on worker welfare is predicted applying augmented worker utility and employer demand for hours functions. Plausible inter-temporal scenarios suggest that unless workers gain more control over the timing of their overtime and comp time hours, they are likely to experience a net loss in welfare. This will occur to the extent employers use the new overtime regulation to vary work hours and schedules more closely with fluctuations in output demand as opposed to better customizing work hours to fit workers' needs to balance work with competing demands on their time, that is, adopting a short rather than longer-run time horizon regarding the restraint of labor costs. Alternative policies are more likely to raise welfare.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Working Longer Hours: Pressure from the Boss or Pressure from the Marketers?Review of Social Economy, 1997
- Loss Aversion and Adaptation in the Labor Market: Empirical Indifference Functions and Labor SupplyThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1996
- FLSA Compliance and EnforcementCompensation & Benefits Review, 1996
- Flexible Work Hours and Productivity: Some Evidence from the Pharmaceutical IndustryIndustrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, 1996
- DO LABOR MARKETS PROVIDE ENOUGH SHORT‐HOUR JOBS? AN ANALYSIS OF WORK HOURS AND WORK INCENTIVESEconomic Inquiry, 1995
- Assessing the Time‐Squeeze Hypothesis: Hours Worked in the United States, 1969–89Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, 1994
- Flexible men and women. The changing temporal organization of work and culture: an empirical analysisSocial Science Information, 1991
- An Empirical Study of Labor Market Equilibrium Under Working Hours ConstraintsThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1990
- The economics of flextimeJournal of Behavioral Economics, 1985
- A NOTE ON SOME ECONOMIC AND WELFARE ASPECTS OF WORKING‐TIME REGULATION*Australian Economic Papers, 1982