You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: LeoThread 2025-10-23 19-57

in LeoFinance2 days ago

Part 8/11:

James McFersonen expressed skepticism, questioning the logic behind expecting increased productivity from working fewer days without a corresponding change in work hours or output expectations. He cynically suggested that if working fewer days could improve productivity, then perhaps working six days in five could be a solution—pointing out the lack of evidence supporting the "fewer days, same pay" proposal and implying it relies more on optimistic assumptions than empirical data.

Critical Perspective on Productivity Claims