More than seven in 10 of employees
don’t mind the daily grind and are actually pretty happy at work, according to
the results of an annual survey.
The findings come from
the latest well-being work barometer, carried out by Edenred-Ipsos, which
questioned 14,400 employees in 15 countries around the world and found that 71 percent
of people reported feeling positive about their work.
As you might expect,
well-being at work came down to a mix of factors, including the working
environment, how much people feel appreciated and how they feel about the work
they do.
However, while the report
found a high level of well-being overall, there were differences between
countries.
Indian employees came out
top of the pile, with 88 percent of workers reportedly feeling positive about
their work. While Japan fared far worse, with just 44 percent of employees
surveyed responding positively about their jobs.
The UK and China were on
equal footing, with an average of 71 percent of workers scoring positively for
workplace well-being, with the US nudging higher with 77 percent.
According to the team
behind the annual survey, 10 items related to well-being at work were
identified, broken down into three ‘pillars’ of ‘environment’, ‘appreciation’
and ‘emotion’.
They found that across
all countries, environmental factors scored highest, including knowing what was
required of them at work.
But employees across the
world are falling short when it comes to appreciating their workers, as are
‘emotion’-related scores – such as how much someone enjoys going to work in the
morning and how interested they are in their job.
Trends emerged across
countries in terms of what was most important to them. Well-being was most
related to environment for Japan, Turkey, China, Italy and Poland.
In India, Mexico, Brazil
and Chile, emotional factors such as enjoying coming to work and being
stimulated by the job were most important.
While for Spain, the UK
and the US, the three categories were more equal, with less emotional factors
having an impact on well-being compared to employees in other nations.
‘In professional
environments undergoing profound changes, employees play a central role. Active
consideration for their well-being at work is a priority,’ said the Ipsos
Group’s Antoine Solom.
‘In a sometimes difficult
economic context, employee engagement is central to the sustainable performance
of organizations,’ added Jeanne Renard of Edenred.
The list ranked India at
first with 88 percent of workers reportedly feeling positive about their work.
India was followed by Mexico (81 percent), USA (77 percent), Chile (77
percent), Brazil (77 percent), Germany (74 percent), UK (71 percent), China (71
percent), Poland (70 percent), Belgium (70 percent), Spain (68 percent), France
(67 percent), Turkey (65 percent), Italy (63 percent) and Japan (44 percent). The
percentage of positive workers in India is double than that of Japan.
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