Hot temperatures lead to lesser productivity at work: Study

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The of people drops by 4 per cent per degree when temperatures rise above 27 degrees in workplaces requiring manual labour, says a study which drew its data from the Indian sector.

A one-degree increase in the ten-day temperature average raises the probability that a worker will be absent by as much as

5 per cent, it said.

The study on the Impact of Temperature on and Labour Supply: Evidence from Indian was conducted by the at the

It also talked about the impact of high temperature on absenteeism at work.

"Absenteeism increases in both labour-intensive and automated processes," the study said.

It said installing air conditioning or other climate control measures in the workplace mitigates declines, but not absenteeism.

"The same is not true, however, for absenteeism. Sustained hot temperatures continue to lead to higher rates of absenteeism even when the workplace has climate control measures," it said.

Anant Sudarshan, of the study and at the Energy Policy Institute, said in a statement, "Because human physiology is the same whether you live in India, the US or anywhere else in the world, the connection between hot temperatures and lower productivity has fundamental implications for how we should think about climate change".

The study further suggested that businesses and governments must adapt to climate change to sustain and increase productivity.

"Climate control, such as air conditioning, is an expensive solution and may still be only a partial fix. In the long-run, manufacturing sectors may migrate to cooler climates or automation may increase to make up for the less productive human employees," the study noted.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, August 30 2018. 19:25 IST