Employees report a lack of financial wellbeing support

-

There is a significant increase in reported employee financial stress since 2021.

According to the results of BrightPlan’s 2022 Wellness Barometer Survey, 72 percent of employees have reported that they are stressed about their finances— which in turn has affected workers’ mental and physical health as well as workplace productivity.

Rising inflation (79%) is employees’ top financial concern, followed by adequate retirement planning (59%), with employees currently contributing significantly more to retirement.

In addition, market volatility (56%), having sufficient emergency savings (55%), and paying off debt (44%) rank high.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

With an 11 percent increase over the past year, employee financial stress is at an all-time high.

 

What is the impact of financial stress?

Deteriorating financial health is impacting both mental health (77%) and physical well-being (52%).

Those reporting financial stress state they lose, on average, 11.4 hours in productivity every wee. This translates into over $4 billion in lost productivity weekly for U.S. employers.

 

Financial wellness benefits are the most desired

Increased financial stress is shifting employee priorities. Financial wellness-related benefits are now the most desired innovative benefit, rising from No. 3 (29%) in 2021 to No. 1 (54%) this year.

The desire for financial wellness benefits is followed by mental health benefits (33%) and flexible time off (30%).

Unsurprisingly, nearly nine out of 10 employees (88%) expect their employers to provide tools and resources to help them with their finances.

Also. the effect of offering enhanced benefits is strong, with 95 percent of workers saying they have a positive impact:

  • 60% say they would work harder
  • 59% would feel more financially secure
  • 58% would be more engaged and productive
  • 34% would be more committed and stay longer

“As the pandemic’s impact on the workplace lessens and economic uncertainty increases, financial wellness is top of mind,” said Marthin De Beer, BrightPlan founder and CEO. “Employees are more concerned and stressed about their finances than ever before. Fortunately, companies have gained trust among their workforce. By offering innovative wellness benefits, employers can leverage that trust to attract, retain and engage their best workers.”

“Two years of COVID-19 upheaval have caused employees to reexamine the influence that work is having on their life, and whether that influence is a positive or negative one,” said Danielle Posa, founder of Workplace Wellbeing Advisors. “As a result, it is understandable that well-being, in all its forms, has emerged as a C-suite priority. Companies can lessen the negative impact of the Great Resignation by putting well-being front and center and making it a part of the entire employee experience. In fact, when well-being is strategically ingrained into the fabric of the culture, it can be a real competitive advantage in today’s market.”

 

Amelia Brand is the Editor for HRreview, and host of the HR in Review podcast series. With a Master’s degree in Legal and Political Theory, her particular interests within HR include employment law, DE&I, and wellbeing within the workplace. Prior to working with HRreview, Amelia was Sub-Editor of a magazine, and Editor of the Environmental Justice Project at University College London, writing and overseeing articles into UCL’s weekly newsletter. Her previous academic work has focused on philosophy, politics and law, with a special focus on how artificial intelligence will feature in the future.

Latest news

Alison Lucas & Lizzie Bentley Bowers: Why your offboarding process is as vital as onboarding

We know that beginnings shape performance and culture, so we take time to get them right. Endings are often rushed, avoided or delegated to process.

Reward gaps leave part-time and public sector staff ‘at disadvantage’

Unequal access to staff perks leaves part-time and public sector workers less recognised despite strong links between incentives and engagement.

Workplace workouts: simple ways to move more at your desk and boost health and productivity

Long periods at a desk can affect energy, concentration and physical comfort. Claire Small explains how regular movement during the working day can support wellbeing.

Government warned over youth jobs gap after King’s Speech

Ministers face calls for clearer action on youth employment as almost one million young people remain outside education, work or training.
- Advertisement -

UK ‘passes 8 million mental health sick days’ as anxiety and burnout hit younger workers

Anxiety, depression and burnout are driving millions of lost working days as employers face growing calls to improve mental health support.

Employers face growing duty of care pressures as business travel costs surge

Employers are under growing pressure to protect travelling staff as geopolitical instability, rising costs and disruption reshape business travel.

Must read

Kim Lewin: Overcoming the five roadblocks to workforce management success

More than 17 percent of new technology initiatives fail, sometimes, according to McKinsey, generating large enough cost overruns so as to put an organisation’s future in jeopardy. Even successful projects often fail to achieve the full range of intended benefits. In the case of a technology project seeking to hit its mark – from staying on budget to achieving the desired results – these failures can often be traced back to shortcomings in how the human element of the project was managed.

70:20:10 is yet to reach its peak, says GoodPractice report

New research from GoodPractice shows that uptake of 70:20:10 is broader and more sophisticated than has been previously recognised, acting as a change agent across geographies and sectors.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you