From News Nation:
“Many who quit their jobs in
‘Great Resignation’ regret it”
You might have heard of the
“Great Resignation,” the economic trend in which millions of Americans have
been quitting their jobs since early 2021. Most of those who quit during that
period weren’t dropping out of the workforce; on the contrary, they were
seeking better jobs. A new survey also suggests that many of those who quit now
regret it. A Harris poll conducted for USA Today found that about one in five
workers who quit their job wish they had remained in their old job; meanwhile,
only around a quarter of job switchers say they’re satisfied enough with their
new job to stay. Kathryn Minshew, editor of the career development platform The
Muse, joined “NewsNation Prime” on Thursday to discuss the poll and broader
employment trends. “I think that the pandemic caused a lot of people to rethink
their priorities. It created a wakeup moment for so many folks that I think
caused the first wave of the Great Resignation. Unfortunately, what we’re
seeing now is those first jobs that a lot of people landed at are not
necessarily the right match for the long term,” she said. “And that’s going to
continue to, I think, cause a lot of turmoil over the several months.”
More than 4 million workers quit
their jobs in February, marking more than 13 million resignations that took
place since November. Job switchers often benefited from pay increases at their
new jobs, providing a powerful incentive to resign from their former positions.
Indeed, a recent Pew Research Center survey found that 63 percent of people who
quit their jobs in 2021 said low pay played at least some role in their
decision to quit. Minshew noted that there are generational gaps in how
Americans think about their jobs. “We did a survey recently on The Muse, which
serves primarily Gen Z and millennial job seekers, and 80 percent of them said
that they would leave a job in under six months if it didn’t mean expectations,”
she noted. Despite the regrets expressed by some, there is little sign that the
Great Resignation is abating. The 4.4 million workers who quit their jobs in
February was just barely fewer than the record 4.5 million who quit in
November. Minshew noted that employers are changing how they think about
employee retention. “We work with a lot of employers, a lot of hiring managers
at The Muse, and many of them are rethinking the rules of the workplace, the
benefits they offer, the way they treat their people, in an effort to not only
… attract younger workers but also create an environment that they’ll want to
stay in,” she said.
^ The Great Resignation have done
good and bad things. For the Bad: it has led to Customers and Patients having
to either wait longer to be served or not being served at all. For the Good: it
has forced Employees to increase the salaries and other perks to keep their Employees.
^
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