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December 2, 2011 8:10 AM

84 percent of workers looking to leave their jobs

By
Kimberly Weisul

 (courtesy flickr user skalas2 http://www.flickr.com/photos/skalasinc/)

(MoneyWatch) 

Is it really that bad? A new survey by Right Management, the consulting arm of staffing group Manpower, finds that a whopping 84% of employees are planning on searching for a new job in 2012. That compares to 60% of the respondents in a similar survey by Right Management conducted two years ago. The company surveyed more than 1,000 people in the U.S. and Canada. Only five percent of survey respondents said they were planning to stay in their current job.

Bram Lowsky, a senior vice president at Right Management, says intent to leave is the workplace equivalent of asking if the country is heading in the right direction. In essence, employees are saying the workplace is headed in the wrong direction -- very wrong. Say Lowsky:

Employees are restless and feel they are lacking in options. The prolonged period of economic uncertainty has meant much less job mobility than usual, and employees understandably believe they have fewer career opportunities.

Other research organizations have found substantial numbers of people looking to get out of their current jobs, but nowhere near the Right Management numbers. A survey this summer by Mercer found that 32 percent of employees said they were "seriously considering leaving" their jobs. The youngest workers were mostly likely wanting to make a change.

Figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released this summer showed that record numbers of people were quitting their jobs, but it's not as if the entire workforce is moving into new positions: According to that data, almost two million Americans quit their jobs voluntarily in May, up 35 percent from January 2010.

Then again, maybe asking people if they plan to look for a new job next year is like asking them if they plan to go to the gym three times a week. Of course they plan to, but how many actually manage to follow through?

More on MoneyWatch
-- Half of workers just don't care
-- Time to quit your job?
-- Why you didn't land the top job

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
  • Kimberly Weisul

    >> View all articles

    Kimberly Weisul is the co-founder of One Thing New, the free email newsletter for smart, busy women. She was previously Senior Editor at BusinessWeek, responsible for all coverage of entrepreneurship and for launching BusinessWeek SmallBiz, a bimonthly magazine. She is also a freelance writer, editor and editorial consultant.

Add a Comment
by tsigili December 2, 2011 2:00 PM EST
This economy has made most people hate their jobs, because they are overworked, overstressed, and are treated badly by their employers.
Reply to this comment
by amerilatino December 2, 2011 10:36 AM EST
This is a reflection on the poor quality of management, top to bottom, that this country has been putting out during the last decade. I have worked unloading, han-forming and welding steel to custom specs in a noisy shop where I ended the day with a salt-encrusted shirt from the sweat, and did not want to leave. I have also worked in a large, clean climate-controlled drafting room with piped music and a benefits package where the manager made life miserable because of his "hormone treatment-induced" schizoid sociopathy and hostile, dyslexic inability to give accurate written or verbal direction.

I did not hate that workplace because I was indolent, inflexible or shiftless.
Reply to this comment
by choptopford December 2, 2011 9:17 AM EST
they a treated like s12t by the bosses and the unions you havt o work 50 years any why not have a job you like and bosses who care
Reply to this comment
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