Respondents to a survey from BofA also said better compensation was the top reason they’d consider leaving their company.
Published May 28, 2024 - HR Dive
Emilie Shumway, Editor
A Bank of America branch on Jan. 12, 2024, in New York, N.Y. A recent Bank of America survey found that workers are feeling more "financially well" ・although fewer than half see themselves this way.
What employees say they most value seems to fluctuate with trends in the economy and culture. While inflation has cooled somewhat from its historic peak in 2022, workers are still feeling the impact. More than half of U.S. adults told The Harris Poll and the American Staffing Association in January that their paychecks were still not keeping up with inflation, and nearly 4 in 10 said they were in an even more stressful situation than the year before.・/span>
While Bank of America found feelings of financial wellness appear to be trending upward, the numbers still aren’t stellar, with fewer than half of workers reporting their financial wellness was good or excellent. Slightly over half of men reported high financial well-being, while women lagged behind at 36%.
But employers shouldn’t worry too much about employees leaving for new jobs;。ank of America also found 70% of workers plan to stay at their company for the next year, reflecting a trend that some are calling “the big stay.”
What may be more surprising is why employees said they’d stay - a good work/life balance topped the list, with 60% saying they’d stay for this reason, compared to 53% for compensation - as well as the additional benefit employees say they most want: a four-day workweek. The numbers suggest that while good compensation is a baseline need, employees deeply value their personal time and, beyond a certain point, may be unwilling to trade it for more money.
The push for a four-day workweek has gained steam in recent years. Last August, three-quarters of respondents to a Resume Builder survey said they’d switch jobs for a four-day workweek and 1 in 3 said they’d take a pay cut. The benefit is still exceedingly rare, however; an Indeed analysis found that while more job postings mention four-day workweeks, that number only rose from 0.1% in September 2019 to 0.3% in September 2023.