Pessimism Rocks America’s Post-Recession Workplace
If a sampling of Americans is correct, the U.S. economy and workplace was forever changed for the worse by the Great Recession.
According to a majority of adults polled by the John H. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers, college will continue to be unaffordable, people won’t be able to retire as expected and jobs will continue to be insecure.
Titled “Unhappy, Worried and Pessimistic: Americans in the Aftermath of the Great Recession,” the report was based on a survey of 1,153 adults taken between July 24 and Aug. 3.
Even if they “retire” as planned, slightly more than half said they believed “the elderly” will have to continue working in a part-time job.
Only 16 percent of those surveyed thought employment and opportunities will be better for the next generation. That compared to 56 percent who thought so in a July 1999 survey.
One-third of the respondents said their standards of living were unscathed by the recent recession. But another one-third said they had been temporarily “troubled” or “set back” by the economic downturn. The remainder characterized their situations as permanently “devastated” or “downsized.”
Asked to check words and phrases that described the “typical American worker,” a whopping 70 percent checked “not secure in their jobs” and 68 percent checked “highly stressed.”
The phrases checked next-most often were “takes pride in work,” by 45 percent, and “productive,” by 43 percent. The least-checked phrase — “happy at work” — was checked by a mere 14 percent, and only 18 percent checked “well paid.”
The Heldrich Center noted that all surveys are subject to sampling error, and they said their results should be viewed with a plus or minus 3 percentage point margin of error, with a 95 percent confidence level.
This article appeared in print in edition of Hamodia.
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