Employees put in longer hours on jobs since 2008 recession: Survey
New Delhi, Sept 25:
Employees are putting in longer hours on their job than
five years ago as 67 per cent of employees said they are spending ‘a
great deal’ more hours at work, since the recession began in 2008, says a
global survey.
According to a poll by Right
Management, the talent and career management experts within
ManpowerGroup, nearly four out of five surveyed workers said their
organisation’s employees spend more time on the job since the recession
began in 2008.
As many as 67 per cent of people who
were surveyed said they are spending ‘a great deal’ more hours at work
compared to 2008, while 10 per cent of the workforce said there working
hours have increased ‘somewhat’ in the period under consideration.
Meanwhile,
only 23 per cent said that employees in their organisation are “not
really” spending work longer hours than five years ago.
Moreover, recent polls by Right Management have also identified the growing pressure on workers today.
“The data shows they rarely leave their desk for lunch.
They
respond to emails from the boss at all hours. They are not taking all
their vacation time. And when others are laid off, the work they did
must be shared by the remaining employees,” Right Management said.
“There
are times when deadlines or projects command longer hours;” Right
Management’s northeast region General Manager Matt Norquist said adding
that “leaders need to connect the intensity of workloads with dialogue
that aligns the work with individual employees’ ambitions, and the
organisations’ broader strategic objectives.”
The online poll of 325 employees was conducted between August 16 and September 15.
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