Job security in the EU: how confident are Europeans about keeping their jobs in these difficult economic times?

Similar documents
SME Access to Finance

GLOBAL ENTERPRISE SURVEY REPORT 2009 PROVIDING A UNIQUE PICTURE OF THE OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FACING BUSINESSES ACROSS THE GLOBE

Special Eurobarometer 418 SOCIAL CLIMATE REPORT

HONG KONG PEOPLE ABANDON THEIR UPBEAT OUTLOOK

Flash Eurobarometer 458. Report. The euro area

Flash Eurobarometer N o 189a EU communication and the citizens. Analytical Report. Fieldwork: April 2008 Report: May 2008

Employment and Social Policy

Flash Eurobarometer 386 THE EURO AREA REPORT

EUROBAROMETER 71 PUBLIC OPINION IN THE EUROPEAN UNION SPRING This survey was requested and coordinated by Directorate-General for Communication.

Introduction of the euro in the new member states

Markit Global Business Outlook

Deloitte/SEB CFO Survey Comparison between Nordic and European CFOs

European Social Reality

Press release. Consumer mood brightened again towards end of year. Findings of the GfK Consumer Climate Europe study for the fourth quarter of 2014

European Employment and Social Policy

General public survey after the introduction of the euro in Slovenia. Analytical Report

Flash Eurobarometer 470. Report. Work-life balance

Europeans knowledge of economic indicators

PROJECT LINK FALL MEETING NEW YORK, OCTOBER 2015 COUNTRY REPORT : SWITZERLAND

Previsions Macroeconòmiques. Macroeconomic scenario for the Catalan economy 2017 and June 2017

The Deloitte/SEB CFO Survey Optimism soars

Flash Eurobarometer 458. The euro area

INTRODUCTION 1 1. RETIREMENT IN GERMANY 2 2. THE CHANGING NATURE OF RETIREMENT 2 3. THE STATE OF RETIREMENT READINESS 6

The 2009 European elections

The Sage Business Index 2013

The EU Craft and SME Barometer 2018/H2

No work in sight? The role of governments and social partners in fostering labour market inclusion of young people

PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF VAT

Flash Eurobarometer 398 WORKING CONDITIONS REPORT

INTRODUCTION AEGON GERMANY REPRESENTATIVE 1 1. RETIREMENT IN GERMANY 2 2. THE CHANGING NATURE OF RETIREMENT 2 3. THE STATE OF RETIREMENT READINESS 6

Britain s Brexit hopes, fears and expectations

Working Group Social Protection statistics

Parlemeter - November 2012 European Parliament Eurobarometer (EB/EP 78.2)

The EU Craft and SME Barometer 2017/H2

European Private Equity Outlook Frankfurt am Main, February 2015

Spring Forecast: slowly recovering from a protracted recession

Two years to go to the 2014 European elections European Parliament Eurobarometer (EB/EP 77.4)

Manufacturing & Engineering: Cautious optimism for the future. Manufacturing & Engineering PRECISE. PROVEN. PERFORMANCE.

PIMCO Cyclical Outlook for Europe: Near-Term Recovery, Long-Term Risks

Canadian Consumer Confidence Index & 2012 Holiday Spending Intentions. A TNS News Release November 22, 2012

Fieldwork February March 2008 Publication June 2008

Special Eurobarometer 465. Gender Equality 2017

A Hard Reality of Job and Pay Cuts Fuels the Public s Economic Anxiety

TRUE FACTS AND FALSE PERCEPTIONS ABOUT FEDERAL DEFICITS" Remarks by Thomas C. Melzer Rotary Club of Springfield, Missouri December 6, 1988

ECONOMIC AND MONETARY DEVELOPMENTS

THREE-QUARTERS (76%) OF CANADIANS BELIEVE COUNTRY IS IN RECESSION

Flash Eurobarometer 408 EUROPEAN YOUTH REPORT

SOLIDARITY THAT SPANS THE GLOBE: EUROPEANS AND DEVELOPMENT AID

AirPlus International Travel Management Study 2017 Part 1 Forecast of business travel costs and bookings. Where will 2017 take us?

The Morning Call / Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion THE 2009 LEHIGH VALLEY QUALITY OF LIFE SURVEY KEY FINDINGS REPORT

Deloitte Belgian CFO Survey Corporates are defensive. Benchmarking corporate financial attitudes

Developments for age management by companies in the EU

Press release The next GfK Consumer Climate Study will be published on May 24, 2018, 8:00 a.m.

The EU Craft and SME Barometer 2011/H1

What is Risk? How has the risk questionnaire been designed? Sean Sample and Lisa Sample. 2 February 2017

Fieldwork: September 2008 Publication: October 2008

Emotions and Finances: Most Employees Are Scared or Confused About Their Money

The Power of Protection Confidence in the future. Global Report

AirPlus International Travel Management Study 2017 Part 1 Forecast of business travel costs and bookings. Where will 2017 take us?

Europeans attitudes towards the issue of sustainable consumption and production. Analytical report

Social climate. Fieldwork May-June 2009 Publication January 2010

The Outlook for the European and the German Economy

Gordon Thiesssen: The outlook for the Canadian economy and the conduct of monetary policy

Economy Ends 2016 Strongly, Liberals Gaining On Conservatives

Eurozone. EY Eurozone Forecast December 2013

Public Trust in Insurance

Press conference. Annual Report February 10, 2005

Public Opinion Monitor

AARP INTERNATIONAL OPINION LEADER RESEARCH ON GLOBAL AGING EXECUTIVE SUMMARY PREPARED FOR AARP

CFOs have also brought forward their estimates for the timing of interest rate rises, with 96% expecting rates to be higher in a year s time.

: Monetary Economics and the European Union. Lecture 8. Instructor: Prof Robert Hill. The Costs and Benefits of Monetary Union II

SME Future Attitudes. Insight Report Q aldermore.co.uk

ASR s US Survey of Household Finances July 2011

Standard Eurobarometer 83 Spring 2015 THE EU BUDGET REPORT

investor sentiment indicator

Almost everyone is familiar with the

Eurozone Ernst & Young Eurozone Forecast Autumn edition September 2011

THREATS TO PROFITABILITY & OPPORTUNITIES FOR GROWTH A SURVEY AMONGST THE UK S TOP 100 LAW FIRMS

A positive outlook on auto-enrolment contributions phasing. High

Time for a. New Deal. for Young People. Broadbent Institute poll highlights millennials precarious future and boomers worries.

perceptions of climate

The Social Situation in the European Union 2009

TO SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR PEOPLE IN ALL FORMS OF EMPLOYMENT IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE EUROPEAN PILLAR OF SOCIAL RIGHTS

THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK GROUP

EUROBAROMETER 71. Fieldwork: June - July 2009 Publication: January 2010

46 ECB FISCAL CHALLENGES FROM POPULATION AGEING: NEW EVIDENCE FOR THE EURO AREA

IV. EXPECTATIONS FOR THE FUTURE

Effectiveness of International Bailouts in the EU during the Financial Crisis A Comparative Analysis

Active Ageing. Fieldwork: September November Publication: January 2012

DISPOSABLE INCOME INDEX

Press release The next GfK Consumer Climate Study will be published on April 30, 2019, 8:00 am

Generations at Work. March 2017

Boomers at Midlife. The AARP Life Stage Study. Wave 2

Pan-European opinion poll on occupational safety and health

Eurozone. EY Eurozone Forecast March 2015

Mind The Gap Quantifying The Pensions Savings Gap in Ireland September 2010 EPSG_CBC_IRELA_28473_BRO.indd 1 02/09/ :18

QUARTERLY INDICATORS Southern Nevada Business Confidence Index

Gathered information on the impact of the financial crisis on the Performing Arts sector by telephone interviews of Pearle* s members.

Delivering the pulse of the nation to you

The Economic Situation of the European Union and the Outlook for

Transcription:

Think... Precise insights for European growth Job security in the EU: how confident are Europeans about keeping their jobs in these difficult economic times? Unemployment is the biggest concern of Europeans for their country. Logically, when the unemployment rate in the EU is constantly increasing: in some EU Member States, more than 25% of the population is unemployed, and these job uncertainties are a worry for all categories: for the unemployed, of course, but also for employed people, who are afraid of losing their job. What is the state of job security in the EU today? Are working Europeans confident of keeping their job in the coming months? Do they think that they would be able to find new work? And more generally, do they think that, after several years of crisis, we can finally see the end of the tunnel? A large majority of working Europeans are confident of keeping their job in the coming months: more than eight in ten are very (43%), or fairly confident (39%), while 15% are not very (11%) or not at all confident (4%). Although these results look encouraging at first sight, a deeper analysis casts some doubt on this positive impression: less than half of working Europeans are almost sure that they will keep their jobs in the coming months: those who are very confident. Europeans who are fairly confident only hope that their working situation will remain unchanged in the near future, but their answer reveals some uncertainty. And this is the case of almost four in ten working Europeans! What is worse, the remaining 15% seem to think that the probability that they will lose their job is quite high. Confidence varies slightly with age. The older a worker is, the more likely he is to expect to keep his job: 48% of the 55+ group are very confident, compared with 42%-43% of those aged between 15 and 54. Level of education creates more differences: while just over a third of Europeans who left school before the age of 16 are very confident (35%), more than half of those who were in education longest feel the same (51%). Finally, the largest variations are seen for occupation 58% of managers are very confident of keeping their job, this proportion falls to 43% of the self-employed, 40% of manual workers, and just 38% of other white collars workers. A majority of respondents in these latter categories have some doubts, however limited, about their job security. continued on next page Think... January 2013 TNS 2013 1

continued Think... lessons for business: A workforce that is afraid of ending up out of work can t be good for a company s health. European businesses should monitor staff morale, if possible, reassuring them about their future in the company; internal communication is key here. The productivity of the company as a whole could be improved by an encouraging message from top management to the effect that all staff are part of the company s strategy. Knowing which categories are the most worried about job security could help top managers to target this communication. European businesses should also communicate externally about the job security they offer: their attractiveness will increase as some consumers might adapt their behaviour in order to support a company where employees are safe. European Governments also should probably bear these results in mind. Special attention should be paid to the most worried categories: the youngest, the least educated, other white-collar staff and manual workers. Most insecure Europeans fear the future, and Governments need to demonstrate that they are taking these worries into account: working along with companies and trade unions to improve job security could be a step in the right direction. How confident would you say you are in your ability to keep your job in the coming months? Are you? (This question was asked to the working Europeans only) Source: Special Eurobarometer (EB) Employment & social policy for the European Commission, EB76.2, September-October 2011, conducted by TNS. Think... January 2013 TNS 2013 2

A minority of working Europeans are very confident of keeping their job in the coming months. And what if they were laid off? How easy would it be to find another job? There is a good deal of pessimism in the EU about the likelihood of finding a new job in the event of redundancy: close to a third of working Europeans think that it is unlikely that they would find work in the next six months if they were to lose their existing job (32%). Interestingly, the crisis seems not to have had much overall impact on public confidence in this respect. At the end of 2006, before the subprime crisis in the US (summer 2007) and the beginning of the financial and economic crisis in the EU (September 2008), three in ten working Europeans were already doubtful of their ability to find a new job in the next six months in the event of redundancy. Large differences exist between Member States, reflecting the different economic situations across the EU: in the three Nordic countries and Austria, less than a fifth of the working population say they would be unlikely to find a job if they were made redundant. However, more than four in ten persons say this in Ireland, Hungary and Italy, and an absolute majority do so in Cyprus, Spain and Greece. All Member States have not been hit by the crisis in the same way. If the results of this question are relatively stable at EU level, some national evolutions between 2006 and 2011 are astonishing: pessimism has reduced sharply in Germany (a fall of -21 percentage points in the proportion of respondents who doubt that they could find another job easily), Austria (-17) and Sweden (-11). But at the same time, it has soared in Cyprus (+22), Ireland (+32) and Spain (+33). It gives a healthy image, which can be important all round: for employees, whose confidence in keeping their jobs will be increased; for financial institutions, such as banks, which play an important role for a company; and also for consumers, who might be more likely to purchase the products or services of a company which provides work to their fellow citizens, and which is unlikely to collapse in the near future. EU governments should demonstrate that losing your job does not necessarily means long months or even years of unemployment, because finding new work is possible. Training in sectors that create jobs, like green jobs, could play a role in this respect. It is also important for EU governments to acknowledge how the confidence of their country s population has changed since the beginning of the crisis, to know whether the real situation of the job market corresponds to public perceptions. If you were to be laid-off, how would you rate on a scale of 1 to 10, the likelihood of you finding a job in the next six months? 1 means that it would be not at all likely and 10 means that it would be very likely. (This question was asked to the working Europeans only) Think... lessons for business: Even in difficult economic times, we sometimes hear employers lamenting the difficulties they face in recruiting. It sounds strange indeed, when for the first time ever, the threshold of 200 million unemployed people has been exceeded worldwide; but it might simply mean that the link between companies and citizens needs to be improved. European businesses who recruit should communicate better on their needs, firstly because it will help them to find the right employees meeting their expectations. But also because the message Here, we hire! could have positive repercussions for the company. Source: Special Eurobarometer (EB) Employment & social policy for the European Commission, EB76.2, September- October 2011, conducted by TNS. Think... January 2013 TNS 2013 3

Several years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, aren t we done yet with the crisis? Unfortunately not, say Europeans. Shortly before the cautiously optimistic outlook of Moody s Analytics for 2013, a large majority of Europeans were quite worried about the impact of the crisis on job markets: in autumn 2012, more than six Europeans in ten said that the worst was still to come (62%), while just 29% thought that the crisis had already reached its peak. While pessimism declined almost continuously from June 2009 to spring 2011 (when just 4 points separated the pessimists from the optimists), autumn 2011 marks a turning point: indeed, pessimism rose sharply, by more than 20 points! More than two-thirds of Europeans said that the worst was still to come, surpassing the level reached in May 2009 when the question was asked for the first time. Since autumn 2011, pessimism has remained at a high level. There is often a gap between the way financial analysts foresee the evolution of the economy, and the way these developments are perceived by the general public. This seems to be the case today; although Europeans hear experts explaining that the situation may improve in 2013, and that the euro area might be out of danger, they do not yet feel the same. Anxiety about their jobs overshadows their whole future. The bleak assessment of Europeans who think that the worst impact of the crisis on the job markets is still to come does not necessarily match the real situation of European companies. When European businesses see economic indicators showing signs of recovery, they should make public this optimistic outlook internally and externally: the whole company would benefit from such a positive message. Knowing how anxious Europeans are about unemployment and job security, EU governments should closely monitor this indicator on the impact of the economic crisis on the job market: it provides a sound indication of the public mood. When, as now, a majority of Europeans are pessimistic, EU governments should spread an optimistic message about brighter tomorrows; indeed, when financial analysts and the feared credit rating agencies are even cautiously optimistic, EU governments should say it loud, to boost public confidence. However, when the public feeling about the impact of the crisis seems prematurely over-optimistic, EU governments might have to rein in this over-optimism by saying that though we are on the right track, we still have a long way to go. This will help prevent the public from waking up with a hangover in the morning. Some analysts say that the impact of the economic crisis on the job market has already reached its peak and things will recover little by little. Others, on the contrary, say that the worst is still to come. Which of the two statements is closer to your opinion? Worst is still to come Things have reached their peak Source: Standard Eurobarometer (EB) for the European Commission EB78, Autumn 2012 (November 2012), conducted by TNS. Think... January 2013 TNS 2013 4

Precise plans for Growth Business Growth Internal and external communication Internal communication is an effective way to tell employees that they are part of the future of the company. A confident workforce will be more focused and involved. Establishing an external image as an enterprise where jobs are secure will also benefit the company: it is appealing to consumers. A better definition of needs in terms of recruitment and a positive message to spread Many companies are recruiting, even in difficult times. When they do so, European businesses should ensure that their needs are correctly identified, and communicated to the largest audience. It will help them to find the appropriate candidates, but it will also be good for their image: the slogan Here, we hire! could have positive repercussions. Letting the world know when improvements are expected A large majority of Europeans are convinced that the worst impact of the crisis on job markets is still to come. When their own situation shows signs of improvement, European businesses should say it loud: it could be a good way of distinguishing them from their competitors. Government Growth Reassure the most insecure categories Public confidence in the future is crucial for a government, as it is a vector of growth. EU governments should communicate on their actions to make jobs safe, especially for the most insecure categories. Training in sectors that create jobs Organising training on sectors that might create jobs in the near future could be useful: it might alleviate public anxiety about the future, and help these promising sectors to grow. Be optimistic when pessimism is strong; moderate over-optimism In order to narrow the gap between financial analysts outlooks and public perceptions, EU governments should spread the messages of experts, especially when these are positive. Society as a whole would benefit from a more confident population. However, when people are over-optimistic, EU governments might have to lower somewhat unrealistic expectations, to avoid unpleasant surprises. About TNS TNS advises clients on specific growth strategies around new market entry, innovation, brand switching and stakeholder management, based on long-established expertise and market-leading solutions. With a presence in over 80 countries, TNS has more conversations with the world s consumers than anyone else and understands individual human behaviours and attitudes across every cultural, economic and political region of the world. TNS is part of Kantar, one of the world s largest insight, information and consultancy groups. TNS Web: www.tnsglobal.com Email: enquiries@tnsglobal.com Twitter: @TNS_Global TNS owns all copyright in this paper (including all data contained herein). No person may reproduce or use any information contained in this paper in whole or in part, without express prior written approval. Think... January 2013 TNS 2013 5