Labor Schedule Stability
Topic Schedule Stability

Unstable schedules are common in the U.S. economy, especially in the rapidly growing service sector, with many workers reporting not knowing what their work schedule will be until the last minute or frequent changes to the timing of their shifts. These practices often leave workers wanting more hours than they receive and disrupt their financial stability, health, and family life, while also raising employee turnover costs and reducing productivity for employers.

Equitable Growth began investing in research on the costs of unstable scheduling practices in 2016. Since then, several cities and one state have adopted Fair Workweek ordinances, and we continue to build the evidence base on whether those interventions are working for workers, families, and businesses alike.

Featured work

post

New research shows unstable schedules do not offer more flexibility for U.S. workers

FamiliesLabor
post

Factsheet: Six frequently asked questions about schedule quality and Fair Workweek laws across the United States

FamiliesLabor
post

New research shows Fair Workweek laws ensure workers have more predictable schedules without sacrificing their hours worked

Labor
working paper

How are Municipal-Level Fair Workweek Laws Playing Out on the Ground? Experiences of Food Service and Retail Workers in Three Cities

Labor
post

U.S. workers’ and managers’ experiences with Fair Workweek laws can inform enforcement and education

Labor
Vision 2020

Fair work schedules for the U.S. economy and society: What’s reasonable, feasible, and effective

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor

Explore Content in Schedule Stability94

Equitable Recovery

Policymakers should ensure that the U.S. labor market recovery lasts by boosting workers’ bargaining power and strengthening social infrastructure

LaborFamilies
Equitable Recovery

The future of work and worker power post-COVID a key topic at the 2021 Labor and Employment Relations Association annual conference

LaborCompetitionInequality & Mobility
post

Equitable Growth event will explore the impact of technology in the workplace and potential for advancing worker power

Labor
post

Equitable Growth’s labor market experts deliver comment letter to U.S. Department of Labor on status of independent contractors

CompetitionLaborInequality & Mobility
Vision 2020

Revamping U.S. small business rescue programs amid the coronavirus recession

Tax & MacroeconomicsInequality & MobilityLabor
Vision 2020

Achieving universal paid family and medical leave in the United States

FamiliesTax & MacroeconomicsLabor
Coronavirus Recession

Child care is essential for working parents, but is the industry ready and safe to reopen?

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
report

Unboxing scheduling practices for U.S. warehouse workers

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
Coronavirus Recession

More resilient small U.S. restaurants and their workers can exit the coronavirus recession and sustain an equitable economic recovery

LaborCompetitionInequality & Mobility
Equitable Recovery

The coronavirus recession and economic inequality: A roadmap to recovery and long-term structural change

LaborTax & MacroeconomicsInequality & Mobility
Coronavirus Recession

First Jobs Day report since the onset of the coronavirus recession exposes a U.S. labor market in crisis

Labor
Coronavirus Recession

How the coronavirus pandemic is harming family well-being for U.S. low-wage workers

FamiliesLabor
Connect with us!

Explore the Equitable Growth network of experts around the country and get answers to today's most pressing questions!

Get in Touch