Y12W04VC Parkinson's law, tested
In 1955, a British historian wrote a joke. *Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.* Seventy years later, it's one of the most quoted propositions in productivity writing — and it has, almost by accident, acquired evidence. This week's article examines what Parkinson's law actually predicts, where it holds up, where it doesn't, and what that means for how you structure your own work.
Core Vocabulary
proposition
/ˌprɒpəˈzɪʃən/|prop·o·si·tion
n
A statement offered for consideration or debate; a claimed truth presented for examination.
Word Breakdown: pro- (forward, Latin) + pos- (place) + -ition (state of)
Word family: propose (n.), proposed (adj.)
Synonyms: statement, claim, thesis
Collocations: mathematical proposition, offer a proposition, test a proposition
Example: Parkinson's law is a proposition about how work expands with available time.
bureaucracy
/bjʊˈrɑːkrəsi/|bu·reau·cra·cy
n
A complex administrative structure with many layers and formal procedures; excessive adherence to procedures.
Word Breakdown: bureau- (desk, French) + -cracy (rule or power by)
Word family: bureaucratic (adj.), bureaucrat (n.)
Synonyms: administration, red tape, system
Collocations: government bureaucracy, reduce bureaucracy, bureaucratic system
Example: Parkinson noticed that the bureaucracy of the Navy had expanded even as ships decreased.
qualifications
/ˌkwɒlɪfɪˈkeɪʃənz/|qual·i·fi·ca·tions
n
Limitations that restrict applicability; conditions that must be true for a statement to hold completely.
Word Breakdown: qual- (quality, Latin) + -ification (the act of making)
Word family: qualify (n.), qualified (adj.)
Synonyms: limitations, conditions, caveats
Collocations: important qualifications, with qualifications, add qualifications
Example: Parkinson's law has important qualifications about task complexity.
inventing
/ɪnˈventɪŋ/|in·vent·ing
vb | [invents, invented, inventing]
Creating something new, often unnecessarily; contriving or fabricating something.
Word family: invention (n.), invented (v.)
Synonyms: creating, contriving, fabricating
Collocations: inventing work, inventing reasons, inventing excuses
Example: People invent unnecessary tasks when given too much time.
protracted
/prəˈtræktɪd/|pro·tract·ed
adj
Extended over a long time; drawn out, often negatively.
Word Breakdown: pro- (forward, Latin) + tract- (draw)
Word family: protract (n.), protraction (n.)
Synonyms: prolonged, extended, lengthy
Collocations: protracted negotiations, protracted process, protracted period
Example: A protracted timeline allows work to expand unnecessarily.
compressed
/kəmˈprest/|com·pressed
adj
Shortened or made tighter; reduced in time or space.
Word Breakdown: com- (together, Latin) + press- (press/squeeze)
Word family: compress (n.), compression (n.)
Synonyms: shortened, condensed, squeezed
Collocations: compressed timeline, compressed version, compressed schedule
Example: A compressed deadline often produces quality work in less time.
satirical
/səˈtɪrɪkəl/|sa·tir·i·cal
adj
Using humour, irony, or exaggeration to criticise or ridicule something.
Word Breakdown: sat- (to be full, Latin) + ir- (Latin form) + -ical (relating to)
Word family: satire (n.), satirise (n.)
Synonyms: ironic, mocking, sarcastic
Collocations: satirical essay, satirical comment, satirical intent
Example: Parkinson's observation began as a satirical essay about government.
accrued
/əˈkruːd/|ac·crued
vb | [accrues, accrued, accruing]
Accumulated gradually, especially of benefits or interest; built up over time.
Word Breakdown: ac- (to, Latin) + cru- (grow)
Word family: accrue (n.), accrual (adj.)
Synonyms: accumulated, gathered, built up
Collocations: accrued interest, accrued benefits, accrued experience
Example: The proposition has accrued significant evidence since 1955.
Technical Terms
Parkinson's law
/ˈpɑːkɪnsənz lɔː/|Park·in·son's.law
noun phrase
The principle that work expands to fill the time available for its completion.
Synonyms: task expansion principle, workload elasticity, time-filling phenomenon
Collocations: Parkinson's law holds, Parkinson's law applies
Example: A report deadline of one week often takes exactly five working days, but if given two weeks, the same task expands to fill that time—demonstrating Parkinson's law.
time boxing
/ˈtaɪm bɒksɪŋ/|time.box.ing
noun phrase
The practice of allocating fixed time blocks to tasks rather than allowing open-ended duration.
Synonyms: time-blocked scheduling, deadline constraint, temporal boundary
Collocations: time boxing technique, practice time boxing
Example: A software development team uses time boxing by allocating exactly four hours for a code review meeting rather than continuing until 'done.'
constraint-driven planning
/kənˈstreɪnt ˈdrɪvən ˈplænɪŋ/|con·straint-driv·en.plan·ning
noun phrase
Planning by starting with what limits the work rather than what enables it.
Synonyms: resource limitation, scarcity-based focus, boundary-imposed priority
Collocations: constraint-driven approach, constraint-driven planning
Example: When a team's budget is cut in half, the constraint forces them to prioritize ruthlessly and often discover that some planned features were unnecessary.
deadline effect
/ˈdɛdlaɪn ɪˈfekt/|dead·line.ef·fect
noun phrase
The tendency of work to compress or expand around fixed endpoints; deadlines shape work duration.
Synonyms: urgency-driven productivity, time pressure motivation, terminal date intensity
Collocations: deadline effect research, demonstrate the deadline effect
Example: Students who have a one-week exam deadline complete more preparation than those given one month, illustrating how deadlines create psychological urgency.
diminishing marginal productivity
/dɪˈmɪnɪʃɪŋ ˈmɑːrdʒɪnəl prɒdʌkˈtɪvɪti/|di·min·ish·ing.mar·gi·nal.pro·duc·tiv·i·ty
noun phrase
The principle that additional time yields less additional output; productivity per unit of time decreases with extended hours.
Synonyms: output reduction curve, efficiency decline, proportional yield decrease
Collocations: diminishing marginal productivity applies, principle of diminishing marginal productivity
Example: A factory that adds a tenth worker to a small team sees less productivity gain than when the first worker was added, showing diminishing marginal productivity.
Figurative Phrases
fill the time available
Expand to use the full time allocated; the core of Parkinson's law itself, non-literal expansion.
Etymology/Type: Idiom from Parkinson's Law; work expands to fill available time, so time spent is not indicative of difficulty.
Synonyms: expand to fill the time, use up available time, stretch to fit the deadline
Example: He noticed his revision always seemed to fill the time available — two hours or two days, it didn't matter.
down to the wire
Right up to the deadline; idiom from telegraph systems where the wire was the finish line.
Etymology/Type: Idiom from telegraphy; messages travelled along wires, and "to the wire" means right up to the final moment.
Synonyms: to the last minute, at the final moment, to the deadline's edge
Example: She finished her major project down to the wire, submitting with three minutes to spare.
under the gun
Under time pressure or urgency; idiom with no literal gun involved.
Etymology/Type: Idiom; "under" suggests pressure or threat, "gun" is the source of that threat or urgency.
Synonyms: under pressure, pressed for time, up against the clock
Example: Working under the gun for the first time, he was surprised how efficiently he could actually write.
time flies
Time passes quickly; idiom stating that time doesn't literally fly.
Etymology/Type: Idiom; time is personified as something that moves quickly, like a bird in flight.
Synonyms: time passes quickly, the hours slip by, time rushes past
Example: Time flies when you're genuinely absorbed in a problem — she looked up and two hours had gone.
stretch out
Make longer or extend; idiom where 'stretch' is figurative.
Etymology/Type: Idiom; "stretch" is figurative for extend or make longer, as if pulling something to increase its length.
Synonyms: drag out, prolong, spin out
Example: Without a hard deadline, the planning phase tended to stretch out until it consumed most of the available time.
cut corners
Skip necessary steps; idiom with no literal corners involved.
Etymology/Type: Idiom; "corners" are the shortest paths around obstacles—cutting them means skipping necessary steps.
Synonyms: take shortcuts, skip steps, sacrifice quality for speed
Example: When time ran short, he cut corners on the referencing and lost marks he could easily have kept.
Confusing Words
proposition vs. proposal
Both offer something for consideration, but a proposition is an idea or principle to debate, while a proposal is a concrete plan seeking approval.
- Proposition means a statement, principle, or idea offered for consideration, debate, or proof — Parkinson's proposition that bureaucracies grow to justify themselves even as their actual work shrinks has held true across decades and countries.
- Proposal means a concrete plan or offer put forward specifically for acceptance or rejection — the department submitted a proposal to compress project deadlines in order to test whether tighter timelines actually improve work quality.
If you're discussing an abstract idea or principle to debate, use proposition. If you're discussing a specific plan or offer seeking a yes-or-no decision, use proposal.
protracted vs. extended
Both describe something lasting longer than typical, but protracted carries a sense of unnecessary dragging while extended is more neutral.
- Protracted means drawn out, often with a negative connotation of unnecessary length or delay — a protracted legal battle drains resources and energy, suggesting the length is unwanted and damaging.
- Extended means lengthened or made longer than usual, often without inherent judgment about whether that length is good or bad — an extended deadline can improve work quality if it allows proper thinking time.
If you want to suggest the length is *excessive* or *damaging*, use protracted. If you're simply saying something is *longer than usual* without judgment, use extended.
satirical vs. sarcastic
Both involve saying the opposite of what's meant, but satire is social criticism through irony while sarcasm is personal mockery through tone.
- Satirical means using irony, exaggeration, and humour to criticize or ridicule something on a larger social, political, or moral scale — Jonathan Swift's satirical essay proposing to eat poor children was a scathing critique of indifference to poverty, not a literal suggestion.
- Sarcastic means saying something in a mocking, biting tone that means the opposite, usually aimed at an individual to express contempt or annoyance — when your friend says 'Oh, great, you're late again' in that flat tone, they're being sarcastic, not actually pleased.
If the irony targets a *system, institution, or social idea*, use satirical. If the irony targets an *individual* and is meant to wound or mock, use sarcastic.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.