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Only 45% Of Workers Are Satisfied In Their Jobs, A Record Low: Survey (VIDEO)

First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:05 PM ET

Job Satisfaction

WASHINGTON (AP) -- We can't get no job satisfaction.

Even Americans who are lucky enough to have work in this economy are becoming more unhappy with their jobs, according to a new survey that found only 45% of Americans are satisfied with their work.

That was the lowest level ever recorded by the Conference Board research group in more than 22 years of studying the issue. In 2008, 49% of those surveyed reported satisfaction with their jobs.

The drop in workers' happiness can be partly blamed on the worst recession since the 1930s, which has made it difficult for some people to find challenging and suitable jobs. But worker dissatisfaction has been on the rise for more than two decades.

"It says something troubling about work in America. It is not about the business cycle or one grumpy generation," says Linda Barrington, managing director of human capital at the Conference Board, who helped write the report, which was released Tuesday.

Workers have grown steadily more unhappy for a variety of reasons:

• Fewer workers consider their jobs to be interesting.

• Incomes have not kept up with inflation.

• The soaring cost of health insurance has eaten into workers' take-home pay.

WATCH AP's video report:


If the job satisfaction trend is not reversed, economists say, it could stifle innovation and hurt America's competitiveness and productivity. And it could make unhappy older workers less inclined to take the time to share their knowledge and skills with younger workers.

Nate Carrasco, 26, of Odessa, Texas, says he's been pretty unhappy in most of his jobs, including his current one at an auto parts store.

"There is no sense of teamwork in most places any more," Carrasco gripes.

When the Conference Board's first survey was conducted in 1987, most workers -- 61% -- said they were happy in their jobs. The survey of 5,000 households was conducted for the Conference Board by TNS, a global market research company.

One clue that may explain workers' growing dissatisfaction: Only 51% now find their jobs interesting -- another low in the survey's 22 years. In 1987, nearly 70% said they were interested in their work.

Workers who find their jobs interesting are more likely to be innovative and to take the calculated risks and the initiative that drive productivity and contribute to economic growth, Barrington says.

"What's really disturbing about growing job dissatisfaction is the way it can play into the competitive nature of the U.S. workforce down the road and on the growth of the U.S. economy -- all in a negative way," says Lynn Franco, another author of the report and director of the Conference Board's Consumer Research Center.

Conference Board officials and outside economists suggested that weak wage growth helps explain why workers' unhappiness has been rising for more than 20 years. After growing in the 1980s and 1990s, average household incomes adjusted for inflation have been shrinking since 2000.

Also, compared with 1980, three times as many workers contribute to the cost of their health insurance -- and those contributions have gone up. The average employee contribution for single-coverage medical care benefits rose from $48 a month to $76 a month between 1999 and 2006.

Workers under 25 expressed the highest level of dissatisfaction. Roughly 64% of workers under 25 say they are unhappy in their jobs. The recession has been especially hard on young workers, who face fewer opportunities now and lower wages, some analysts say.

The most satisfied are those ages 25 to 34, who may see some opportunities for upward mobility as baby boomers retire. Around 47% of workers 25 to 34 say they are happy in their jobs.

Some other key findings of the survey:

• 43% of workers feel secure in their jobs. In 2008, 47% said they feel secure in their jobs, while 59% felt that way in 1987.

• 56% say they like their co-workers, slightly less than the 57% who said so last year but down from 68% in 1987.

• 56% say they are satisfied with their commute to work even as commute times have grown longer over the years. That compares with 54% in 2008 and 63% in 1987.

• 51% say they're satisfied with their boss. That's down from 55% in 2008 and around 60% two decades ago.

Carrasco said he wishes his bosses would take time to listen to workers' ideas -- and their difficulties on the job.

"Most of the time they only listen to what their bosses are saying," he says. "Bosses need to come down to the employee level more and see what actually goes on, versus what their paperwork tells them is happening in the stores."

It isn't fair to blame low job satisfaction solely on bad bosses, Barrington says.

"It is two-way responsibility," she says. "Workers also have to figure out what they should be doing to be the most engaged in their jobs and the most productive."

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- We can't get no job satisfaction. Even Americans who are lucky enough to have work in this economy are becoming more unhappy with their jobs, according to a new survey that found...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- We can't get no job satisfaction. Even Americans who are lucky enough to have work in this economy are becoming more unhappy with their jobs, according to a new survey that found...
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05:31 PM on 01/06/2010
The economy is a joke. We have a surging stock market yet no one can find work. A useless stimulus program that added scant jobs. Failed financial reform. A healthcare bill that will yield no tangible results. Senseless occupations in Iraq &Afghanistan. And the list goes on...
hat tip to http://iamned-site.blogspot.com
05:19 PM on 01/06/2010
The real reason is that people are feeling trapped. In the Obama and the Democrat led economy, people are seeing wages and saving decrease the believe their prospects are poor for the future.

Thank you to the Libs for crushing our spirit.
02:49 PM on 01/06/2010
Could it possibly be that 55% of Americans are unhappy with their current employment because they just found out recently that the real reason they have been working harder then ever, for less money in real terms then ever before, is so that those with real power could get their multimillion dollar bonuses?

Reagonomics has been called the trickle down theory of economics. That may prove to be a much more revealing name then those that came up with it intended.
02:36 PM on 01/06/2010
This really should not be a surprise to anyone. You show up every day, do your best and what do you get, same pay while management rakes in millions. Not a great way to keep employees.
01:30 PM on 01/06/2010
As a former HR person, I am thoroughly convinced that the lack of worker satisfaction is directly linked to the lack of union density. In fact, one of the very first efforts of using workplace surveys to address workplace satisfaction turned out to be nothing but a union avoidance tactic. The reality is that Human Resource Management in the US during the 90s focused on things like employee satisfaction -out of fear of unionization. There was at one time a legitimate possibility that President Clinton would be a friend of labor - for instance he put together the Dunlop Commission and pushed the much needed ergonomics OSHA initiative. However, once union revitalization was no longer seen as a threat, HRM and HR research quickly moved back to a pure profit focus. This has led to an increasing level of commoditization of the American worker and as a result less workplace satisfaction, lower quality of work life, higher rates of unemployment, decreasing real wages and benefits, and on and on.
09:01 AM on 01/06/2010
only 45% of workers have jobs, might be the real explanation....

You have to have a job before you can like it.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
02:47 AM on 01/06/2010
There is no American work ethic anymore. People want as much money as they can get for as little work as they can put out. It doesn't make the situation any easier when they hear about CEOs getting multi-million dollar bonuses even when the business they head is going bankrupt.
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ
05:56 AM on 01/06/2010
Your comment is difficult to understand. Are you condemning American workers or American CEOs?

American companies don't give their workers any reason to feel loyalty; the companies certainly have no loyalty to employees. No-benefit, near-minimum wage dead-end expendable part time jobs do not make for conscientious workers. As a matter of fact, someone with a job like that would probably look for any chance he could get to slack off or screw the company out of time, money, and/or materials, and feel good about doing it to boot.
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Articulator
09:44 PM on 01/06/2010
You must be a right winger. Right wingers hate the American worker.
02:22 AM on 01/06/2010
Companies used to honor their workforce as a valuable part of the operation and a window to the customer. There was respect from both sides and the satisfaction after a good day's work.

Nowadays some corporations see their employees as some kind of burden, a mere figure in costs. The employee however under constant stress to be fired, having to work more for less, has little measures of self defense. One is to build up smoke screens and distractions to make him feel safe. This takes time of course, time that is needed for the working process and is lost by making politics.

The feeling of unhappiness at the workplace is often a sign of the inner resignation.
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11:04 PM on 01/05/2010
I've generally loved my job. But I've also generally h8ed the management, one place so much that when I became part of it, I had to leave after about a year to keep my self-respect. (And yes they were sad to see me go; it wasn't because I was ineffective.)
10:45 PM on 01/05/2010
A big part of job dissatisfaction is working harder and longer and carrying the work load of 1.5 employees as the work force is c.ut down. There is almost no downtime.
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Cleo Creech
Atlanta writer, poet, activist.
09:53 PM on 01/05/2010
Companies are so bottom-line, short-term oriented now; any effort or money that used to go to encourage employee satsifaction has long gone out the window. It used to not be unusual for med/large companies to routinely offer education reimbursement, health clubs, companies holiday parties, nicer furniture/cubicles, decorated offices and public spaces, employee anniversary rewards, etc. Even smaller companies would make an effort to keep things feeling freindly and like you were part of a family. Maybe thsi sort of study can be a wake up call, and allow companies to make a business case for building some long-term relationships and engender employee satisfaction.
09:23 PM on 01/05/2010
45%? I would've guessed 99%. LOL
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ssfahrer
10:34 PM on 01/05/2010
I would have guessed ZERO.... What with wages been artificially too high (minimum wage legislation) to allow the Capitalists to exploit workers the way they'd want to, and those wages being too low for said workers to afford to live the way they'd want to.... It's always a no-win situation under capitalism. Learn to love it! (Because it's also a no-win situation under any other kind of economic system....)
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08:44 PM on 01/05/2010
What is happiness? Is happiness an indicator of portentous events or trends? Is happiness a predictor of marked performance or atrophying acheivement? Or is happiness an emotion that may or may not have meaning, depending upon the condition.
In respect due Thomas Jefferson, I doubt if the measurement of happiness has value expect as it correlates with other goals such as learning, growth, performance and achievement over a period of time. It is reported regularly that servants and slaves are happy as are the citizens under the yolk of totalitarianism and people of primitive tribes (including within the tribe, Avatar).
A more relevant, parallel question, would be to ask whether the organizational membership was developing in knowledge and skill with concommitant performance and promotion or recognition. The worth of any organization is how it arranges work such that the employees gain intrinsic and extrinistic competence, that is---opportunity--- over time. Even then happiness is not guaranteed.
In my experience the happiness and highest morale of people are in organizations of low performance with the unnatural laughter and levity of stagnation and decline. But self confidence and self esteem are virtually non existent in addressing the challenges at hand. In high performance organizations the energy of task orientation and opportunity results in exceptional performance and clash of excelling competence.
Is it possible that American job unhappiness is a product of availability of only servant-dead-end jobs for educated and trained citizens that are the making of social dynamite?
06:35 PM on 01/05/2010
Welcome to the new serfdom. The nobility could care less if the serfs are happy. They should be glad they have work (and food and a roof over their heads). If they aren't happy - there's always someone willing to take their place.

Companies have 'increased productivity' by loading up workers - having them do more and work more hours. Look at all the banking and financial industry worker drones doing the job of two or three people - "Be happy you still have a job"...... they 're 'exempt' - no OT - and putting in 80-90 hours a week .

Even those making a 'good' salary - 6 figures - are getting screwed. Go to a good school, work hard, graduate with a ton of debt and get a 'good job' - BUT you're working 60-80 hours a week (far more hours than your parents did), NEVER get to take your vacation, are at your employer's beck and call 24/7 - while earning an HOURLY rate that has less buying power than what a blue collar worker earned in the 70's.... and you had better save a LOT of that salary because you're getting replaced at age 50 with a younger cheaper version of yourself (and will NEVER EVER earn the same salary again).

Kinkos, Mailboxes Etc, Subway and all the other franchise operations are full of owners who USED to be 6 figure executives. They cashed out their 401K's to buy a business so they could work the
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09:21 PM on 01/05/2010
Yup. A family member works in financial services who noted several years ago the absence of gray hairs. Most managers are in their 20s-40s.
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Articulator
09:25 PM on 01/05/2010
Spot on. The American worker now works harder for less pay, less security, less opportunity, and with no hope of it improving in their lifetime all the while there is a huge migration of wealth up to the top 5%. It used to be that you felt if you worked hard, then some time in the future it will pay off. Now you work hard just to keep from drowning and the water keeps getting higher. It is unsettling that your kids are getting older and you barely have time to spend with them. It gets scary when you look into the future and wonder what will happen when you are too old to work. Especially when you hear the right wingers, led by the likes of multimillionaires like Rush bash the few American workers that happened to secure a pension, or retirement benefits, or rail against the safety nets of Medicare and Social security. Why do they so hate the American worker?
10:45 PM on 01/05/2010
Because the American worker hasn't been bled completely dry just yet. As long as one person remains middle-class, they will "rhymes with rich".
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
04:50 PM on 01/05/2010
Job satisfaction means employers have to do more to change their current way of doing business with their employees and their customers. To be happy at what you do, you have to enjoy it. No one can enjoy a monotonous job. No one can enjoy a time-sensitive atmosphere. No one can enjoy a robot-like environment. For people to be happy at work, they must have a sense of freedom, the ability to move around when they need to and have flexible hours that can correspond with their personal needs, and to have a more relaxed, congenial working space and coworkers.

Man was not made to function like machines and are not happy doing such work. And until employers can understand the discontent of their employees and change their way of doing business, their turnover will constantly remain the same because of pure boredom and non-excitement.

Once again I must praise the working habits of Google and the work environment they have made for their employees/partners. Their system works for them and other businesses should take heed and update their work habits accordingly if they wish to have anything similar to the success of Google and their happy employees.
07:38 PM on 01/05/2010
Google has the wonderful advantage of being able to attract the very best employees, people who know how to behave as adults in the workplace and have the most needed skills. Skills which most of us neither have or would be very happy performing [computer science, algorithms]. Bravo to the janitors who have the good fortune to work there. Most companies need people to do repetitive often mindless tasks like put Victoria Secret Panties in a box. If it was fun and stimulating and enriching you would have to pay the employer, thats why it's called work.
Work is something people used to find enriching because they got money for doing it, it gave them pride in supporting their families. People with even lowly or unpleasant jobs found them enriching because they still considered them important. A plumber is the most important person in the world when the white house toilets are clogged.