Financial stress is killing our workplace productivity and costing us our social lives
By Sarah Bregel
Financial stress is absolutely soaring among workers, and that stress is getting more and more costly.
BrightPlan, a digital financial adviser, conducted market research for its 2023 Wellness Barometer Survey, which relied on feedback from 1,400 workers—including 500 HR Leaders, 100 C-Suite executives, and 800 full-time employees—in companies of 1,000 or more. Some key highlights:
Meanwhile, all of this looming monetary dread isn’t just contained to 3 a.m. anxiety dreams. It has a massive impact on productivity during the 9-to-5 workday. Workers estimated they are losing an entire day of work every week to the attention-zapping financial stress. And the growing concern about troubling financial matters isn’t just making workers worse at their jobs—it’s making them worse at managing their personal relationships.
Too stressed to dress
Employees are so overwhelmed by their finances that about 80% say they’re cutting expenses. They don’t just mean axing their monthly CrossFit pass or Massive Envy membership. For many, the cuts are so deep that they are directly impacting social lives:
Bar tabs can be costly, and it might make sense to rein in the spending on Wine Wednesday, Thirsty Thursdays, or Saucey Mom’s Saturday (or whatever adorable nicknamed night of the week you prefer to imbibe on). Still, folks are cutting out more than cocktails. They’re also missing out on big life events because of their budgets:
Crushing financial stress certainly seems to be dimming our social lives in new and depressing ways. What’s not new is that most people still aren’t comfortable discussing finances with friends. Just 56% of employees say they chat openly about their money. With so many missed events and get-togethers—and so little talk about the why—it makes sense that we’re looking at a serious friendship recession. As it stands, we already spend far less time with friends than we did a decade ago.
Chances are, we could all benefit from a little more candor (as well as paycheck bumps) about our concerns, at least with our close personal friends. But the added strain might be a pretty good reason to lean into that cutesy “no gifts” trend that’s become popular at children’s birthday parties in recent years.
Likewise, it’s probably time to rethink that destination wedding, unless your idea of a good party is a party of two.
(15)