Saturday, June 21, 2025
26.7 C
Singapore

Billionaire businessman says 4-day workweek is inevitable because of AI

- Advertisement -

SINGAPORE: Billionaire entrepreneur Steve Cohen made the news this week for saying definitively that a four-day week will be coming to the workplace, in large part because of innovations that Artificial Intelligence (AI) is bringing on.

“My belief is a four-day workweek is coming. You know, between the advent of AI, generally, we hear from people that Fridays are just not — people are not as productive on Fridays,” Mr Cohen is quoted as saying in a CNBC interview earlier this month.

The inevitability of a shortened work week is the main reason why the CEO and chairman of Point72 Asset Management has made a large investment in the US golf startup league TGL, expecting that people will soon have more leisure time to tee up.

He added, however, that he is uncertain as to exactly when the shift to a four-day workweek will happen, but he thinks “it’s an eventuality… That’s just going into a theme of more leisure for people, which means golf rounds that go up, interest will go up, I guess courses will be crowded.”

- Advertisement -
See also  Weekends too short? How Singaporeans feel about a 4-day work week

However, if markets do stay open on Fridays, the traders who work for him are unlikely to be free on that day. But aside from them, he added, “I think the vast majority of people will get an opportunity, I think at some point, to have a three-game weekend.”

Aside from golf, other leisure activities would also be a good investment, he added. “Anything around, you know, I would say leisure, travel, experiences, all that type of that stuff, if people have more time.”

Watch Mr Cohen’s CNBC interview here.

An expectation of a four-day workweek is something that the billionaire hedge-fund boss has in common with Singaporeans, many of whom also expect that a shift is coming.

- Advertisement -

According to The People at Work 2023 study from ADP Research Institute, “For workers in Singapore, this much is crystal clear: flexible working arrangements are imperative. One in three Singaporean workers expects four-day work weeks to become the norm within the next five years.”

See also  Study: Singapore workers want to work less, have more family and personal time

The study, which covered over 32,000 workers in 17 countries is one of the biggest surveys all over the globe.

Aside from a four-day work week, workers in Singapore expressed that they’d want hybrid work arrangements (34 per cent), full flexibility of hours based on productivity and results metrics (32 per cent), and the possibility of working from anywhere around the globe (29 per cent). As for their other expectations in the coming years, many look forward to added time off. /TISG

Read also: Employers: 4-day work week may not suit all industries even as employees expect it to become new norm

- Advertisement -

Hot this week

Founder of Little India’s iconic Jothi Store & Flower Shop passes away at age 93

SINGAPORE: Murugaiah Ramachandran, the founder of the iconic Jothi...

Three injured in multi-vehicle accident on Bedok North Road after truck crosses divider

SINGAPORE: A traffic accident involving multiple vehicles occurred on...

Popular Categories