World | Britain Desperate Times: UK Mulls 3-Day Week Gov't may compensate workers to avoid higher cost of mass layoffs By Matt Cantor Posted Jan 25, 2009 10:39 AM CST Copied PM Gordon Brown. center, speaks at the Regional Economic Council, with Secretary of State for Business and Enterprise Peter Mandelson, left, and Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, Jan. 5. (AP Photo/ Lewis Whyld) Now officially in recession amid the global downturn, the specter of a three-day work week has emerged in Britain, the Independent reports. Though officials say it’s "not imminent," the government has discussed paying firms to cut hours with public cash going toward compensating employees for the lost time. But such a move could hurt already-flagging confidence in the economy. Read These Next Multiple people are dead or missing after an explosion in Tennessee. It started with failure to say 'thank you,' ended with murder. Trump administration begins federal layoffs amid shutdown. Trump's public plea to Bondi was reportedly meant to be private. Report an error