Mood at the workplace
Survey: German employees are dissatisfied
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Many people are in crisis mode – and that also affects their work. This results in a survey. What other results it still comes to.
Many employees in Germany are dissatisfied and feel stressed. This emerges from a survey by the consulting company Gallup, which is available to the German Press Agency. According to this, less than half (45 percent) looks satisfied and confident into the future. This means that the results remain at the low level of the previous year.
In the Europe -wide comparison, Germany ends up in the 21st place in life satisfaction. Among the 38 countries are Finland (81 percent), Iceland (77 percent), Denmark (77 percent), Sweden (69 percent) and the Netherlands (69 percent).
A lot of stress, low employee loyalty
“Political and economic developments and increasing cost of living affect the mood,” said Gallup expert Marco Nink. “In the current situation, resignation seems to prevail instead of a spirit of optimism.”
At the same time, the stress level in Germany with 14th place remains comparatively high. About four out of ten employees stated on the day of the survey to feel stressed. The lowest stress level in Europe therefore showed employees in Denmark (21 percent).
The figures also show that emotional employee loyalty in Europe is lowest worldwide at 13 percent. The average is 21 percent globally. Germany therefore has 9 percent of similarly low values as Austria (9 percent) and Switzerland (8 percent). According to Gallup, this leads to a high willingness to change in Germany: 39 percent of the employees stated that they wanted another job.
dpa
Source: Stern