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How Daylight Saving Time upends the economy

Daylight saving time has long been linked to adverse health effects, but growing evidence shows moving the clock also costs the U.S. economy big bucks.

While much of the analysis surrounding America's twice-a-year clock changes covers the health effects of daylight saving time – which includes a higher risk of cardiac issues amid disrupted sleep schedules – the economic toll hasn't received as much focus. 

But research indicates that DST's adverse impacts on the money side of things are very real, and the evidence is growing.

A study published last year by researchers from several business schools found that investors and capital market participants are slower to respond to accounting reports in the week after we "spring forward" – which falls smack in the middle of earnings season.

"These results are strongest among firms with investors who are more likely to be trading on earnings news and among firms with a less sophisticated investor base," the authors wrote. "Further analysis reveals that our main results are driven by muted reactions to positive earnings surprises, consistent with cognitive impairment and investor pessimism jointly underlying the diminished market response to earnings news."

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Another set of business school researchers found that on the Monday following DST, there is a rise in workplace injuries. Not only that, the injuries were more severe (measured by days of work lost due to the injuries), which surged by 67%.

A subsequent study discovered that on the Monday after DST there is a sharp uptick in "cyberloafing," the practice of employees scrolling the internet for non-work-related activities.

There is also evidence the time change leads to an increase in heart attacks, strokes, and depression, leading to an increase in health care costs. Even commuting becomes more treacherous and expensive, given DST has been linked to spikes in car accidents.

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And while DST has been touted as an energy-saving move, a 2008 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that DST actually led to a 1% increase in residential energy consumption by consumers in Indiana – costing households in the state an extra $9 million on their electric bills and resulting in another estimated $1.7 to $5.5 million in "social costs of increased pollution emissions."

The actual dollar amount of the collective impact of these factors is tough to pin down, but a Chmura Economics & Analytics study from a decade ago found that the springtime change cost the U.S. economy more than $433 million. As of 2021, Manhattan Institute senior fellow Allison Schrager reported that DST cost the airline industry alone hundreds of millions of dollars.

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As the evidence grows showing DST's negative impacts on Americans' health and the economy, momentum is building in Congress to scrap the time change altogether.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., has been leading a bipartisan coalition to get rid of DST, and his "Sunshine Protection Act" eliminating the time change passed the upper chamber by unanimous consent last year. The House never took it up, but lawmakers are giving it another go.

Rubio reintroduced his legislation last week backed by several senators from both sides of the political aisle, and Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., filed a companion bill in the House.

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"This ritual of changing time twice a year is stupid," Rubio said in a statement. "Locking the clock has overwhelming bipartisan and popular support. This Congress, I hope that we can finally get this done."

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