End of the 6×1 scale would generate a cost of less than 1% in industry and commerce, says Ipea

A study by the Institute of Applied Economic Research showed that the labor market has the capacity to absorb the measure of reducing working hours

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According to researcher Felipe Pateo, the cost of workers in large industrial and commercial companies sometimes represents less than 10% of the operating cost.

A study published this Tuesday (10) by the Institute for Applied Economic Research (Ipea) showed that the costs of a possible reduction in working hours to 40 hours a week would be similar to the impacts seen in the real adjustment of the minimum wage. Something that indicates the labor market’s ability to absorb the measure.

According to the research, the such as industry and commerce. In the area of ​​services that depend on more labor, public policies may be needed.

Researcher Felipe Pateo explained that the general working day of 40 hours per week would increase the cost of CLT workers by 7.84%. However, within the total cost of the operation, the effect is smaller.

“When we look at the operation of large companies in the area of ​​commerce, industry, we see that the cost of workers sometimes represents less than 10% of the company’s operating cost. It has a large cost of building stocks, investment costs in machinery”, said Pateo.

Building service companies, such as surveillance and cleaning, can have a greater impact of 6.5% on the cost of operation. In these cases, a gradual transition to the new journey would be necessary. The same would apply to small companies, which may have even more difficulty adapting work schedules, according to Pateo.

“We see that this transition time is also very important for smaller companies. And you need to open up possibilities for hiring part-time workers, for example, who can eventually cover working time on a weekend, if the reduction in working hours could make this process difficult”, he noted.

Fighting inequalities

The study also points out that 44-hour working hours concentrate workers with lower income and education. For Pateo, reducing working hours can reduce inequalities.

“When we reduce the maximum working day to 40 hours, we put these workers who are in jobs with lower salaries, with shorter duration of employment, on an equal footing, at least in terms of the number of hours worked. And we end up increasing the value of these workers’ hourly work”, declared the researcher.

According to the study, the average salary for those who work up to 40 hours a week is R$6,200. 44-hour workers receive, on average, less than half. These employees with longer hours also have less education.

Ipea research shows that more than 83% of people with up to high school education are in this condition, a proportion that drops to 53% among those with higher education. Unlike other sociodemographic characteristics, the incidence of extended working hours shows a strong association with the level of education.

The vast majority of the 44 million CLT workers registered in the Annual Social Information List (Rais) in 2023 worked 44 hours a week. In total, they total 31,779,457, equivalent to 74% of those who had a reported journey. In 31 of the 87 economic sectors analyzed, more than 90% of workers work hours above 40 hours per week.

Rais is a mandatory declaration in which Brazilian companies inform the Ministry of Labor of data about their employees, employment relationships and salaries.

Minor companies

A challenge highlighted in the Ipea study is for smaller companies, as they have, proportionally, more employees with working hours longer than 40 hours. While the national average indicates that 79.7% of workers work more than 40 hours a week, this percentage rises to 87.7% in companies with up to four employees and 88.6% in those that employ five to nine workers.

Workers currently working over 40 hours total 3.39 million jobs in companies with up to four employees and 6.64 million when considering those with up to nine workers.

These sectors include, for example, segments in the education area, activities of associative organizations and other personal services, such as laundries and hairdressers, in which extended working hours predominate between companies with up to four workers.

Debate

The reduction of the working day from 44 hours to 40 hours and the end of the 6×1 scale entered the country’s political radar once and for all at the beginning of the year. Also this Tuesday, the president of the Chamber of Deputies, Hugo Motta (Republicanos-PB), said that one of the House’s priorities this year is precisely to vote on these labor rights. .

Currently, two proposals are being discussed in the House on the subject: one by deputy Erika Hilton (PSOL-SP), PEC 8/25, and another by deputy Reginaldo Lopes (PT-MG), PEC 221/19.

In the message sent to the National Congress last week, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT) also placed the issue among the government’s priorities for the semester.

*With information from Agência Brasil

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