• we cover more than 1,000 news per day, in 2 languages, and 83,000 stocks
Light Dark
it
italian it
english en

The Great Resignation 2.0 is coming – and I salute the European millennials who plan to quit

www.theguardian.com 06-01-2025 07:00 2 Minutes reading

After Covid, the US saw a wave of younger workers leaving unsatisfying and exploitative jobs. Now I hear it’s France’s turn

Recently I was chatting to an acquaintance in Paris, a senior manager in his mid-50s, who works for a French company in the education sector in France. He was complaining to me about what he viewed as a lack of loyalty and commitment among the younger workers he manages – both millennials and gen Z. I imagine the manager is, himself, a good boss; at least, the person I know is sympathetic, flexible, and has admitted to me that he would give everyone raises if he could. So I held my tongue. But inside, every cell in me was cheering for all of the underlings who were willing to leave a job that wasn’t suiting them, or who were demanding more flexibility in their hours and locations.

The phrase “quiet quitting” was first referenced in Urban Dictionary in May 2022, but millennials have had a reputation for being “difficult” employees to manage since well before then. And now, after what was termed the “the Great Resignation” – in the US in the period after Covid – the internet is simmering with rumours that a Great Resignation 2.0 may be brewing, perhaps brought on by employers such as Amazon insisting that staff return to the office five days a week from 2025, when many would still prefer hybrid arrangements. This follows a study by LinkedIn and Microsoft which found that even more people want to quit their jobs today than did in 2021. The survey of 31,000 individuals across 31 countries found that 46% of employees want to leave their jobs in the year ahead – more than the 40% in 2021. (Of course, there’s a big difference between wanting to quit and having the means to go through with it.)

Alexander Hurst is a Guardian Europe columnist

Continue reading...

Info

Related news
Rolls-Royce to invest £300m in expansion of Goodwo...
08.01.25 12:01
by theguardian.com

Rolls-Royce to invest £300m in expansion of Goodwood factory

Luxury carmaker driven to meet demand for bespoke upgrades, after recording third-highest annual sales in 2024

Rolls-Royce Motor Cars has said it will invest £300m in expanding its Goodwood factory in West Sussex to meet the growing demand for bespoke upgrades, after the luxury carmaker recorded its third-highest annual sales in 2024.

The investment will extend the luxury carmaker’s manufacturing facility as it gradually moves away from V12 petrol engines to battery electric vehicles, as well as increasing its capacity to fulfil the whims of some of the world’s richest people.

Continue reading...

Sentiment
0.55
Bearish/Bullish
100