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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 10/2023
  • B0CJWQKJFM
  • 161 pages
  • $3.99
Paperback Details
  • 10/2023
  • 978-1941667477 ‎ B0CL86Q3C4
  • 142 pages
  • $12.95
To Save the Earth, Work Less! The Crucial Environmental Issue No One Is Talking About
Americans believe we need rapid economic growth to create jobs and avoid unemployment—but that is because we do not have the choice of working shorter hours. The Dutch have a better model. By law, they can choose to work part time, which means they avoid unemployment by creating the amount of work people actually want rather than by creating more and more full-time jobs. In the course of this century, most nations of the world could emerge from poverty and have a comfortable middle-class standard of living if we can avoid ecological crisis. But that is a big “if.” To create a sustainable world economy with a high quality of life, it is essential for the world to follow the Dutch model of shorter work hours and slower growth rather than the postwar American model of long work hours and rapid growth.
Reviews
In this impassioned call for (in)action, Siegel (author of A Skeptic’s Faith) argues the merits of Americans working less and having more free time—and by doing so potentially sparing our planet by reducing the consumption of natural resources and production of toxic pollution and waste. Exploring how mass production and an ever-growing workforce has led to "global warming and other urgent ecological challenges,” Siegel urges a rejection of the culture of “compulsory consumption.” Instead, he points to the Dutch model, with a more humane economy, with policies that would encourage fewer work hours, reduce inequality, encourage “ecological economics,” and reshape the concept of “growth.”

With well-chosen data, Siegel demonstrates how countries like The Netherlands have "created a prosperous economy with low unemployment" due to letting employees work fewer hours, though he’s clear-eyed about the practical challenges of fostering such profound change. To that end, he examines historical precedents like the Depression and the women's rights movement, chronicling the many ways employment actually has changed within the past century. The stakes are high, and he’s compelling in his depiction of a potential future where, if American workers continue to work, produce, and consume at the continued growing rate of recent decades, technology and environmental catastrophes will "bring immense destruction.”

Through consistent reiteration of its thesis—"this book looks at a way of dealing with ecological limits that is more politically practical"—even when Siegel entertains oddball hypotheticals like what if helicopters became the new cars, To Save the Earth, Work Less is an urgent, thought-provoking resource that challenges orthodoxies of American workforce, consumerism, capitalism, inequality, and "the law of diminishing marginal utility.” This is a quick, potent read that will spark conversation and provide food for thought on essential questions of the American dream, what it actually means to feel satisfied in life, and nothing less than the fate of the world.

Takeaway: Urgent call to reduce work, consumption, and inequality and save the planet.

Comparable Titles: Mary Robinson's Climate Justice, Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 10/2023
  • B0CJWQKJFM
  • 161 pages
  • $3.99
Paperback Details
  • 10/2023
  • 978-1941667477 ‎ B0CL86Q3C4
  • 142 pages
  • $12.95
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