Franklin Templeton’s Voice of the American Worker Study Indicates Employees are Re-evaluating What They Want from Their Employers
Traditional retirement indicators remain less important, while living comfortably and independently are top financial concerns; Well-being is key component to financial health
“For employers across the country, there has never been a more urgent time to evaluate benefit offerings and consider ways to evolve how they are supporting employee needs,” said
Now in its second year, the survey was conducted by The Harris Poll on behalf of
Focus on well-being is key part of employer-employee relationship
As employees seek opportunities to improve their well-being, most are interested in benefits such as access to a financial professional (56 percent), financial planning tools (62 percent) and financial education (54 percent). When considering a new job opportunity, employees rate the importance of salary vs. benefits nearly equally, with 84 percent of respondents noting the importance of benefits that support financial well-being. Three-quarters of American workers (75 percent) also indicate it is now more important to work for a company that reflects personal values than this was to them a year ago.
“Workers are looking to their employers for help,” adds
Workers remain more focused on financial independence vs. traditional retirement
Like those surveyed in 2020, employees in this year’s study continue to re-define financial milestones with an eye on freedom and flexibility. Seventy-six percent of workers say that financial independence is a primary priority, with 84 percent more focused on becoming financially independent than on traditional retirement. Overall, 87 percent of employees would be willing to give their employer some form of personal information in exchange for more personalized benefits, while 68 percent indicate they would like their employer to recommend financial strategies based on their own income and financial goals.
“Personalization has empowered consumers and is becoming the market standard,” said
Workers continue to re-evaluate how they think about finances, with debt a major issue
Workers assign almost equal value to mental (79 percent), physical (79 percent), and financial health (77 percent) when considering their overall well-being. Despite trying to optimize across all three areas of well-being, workers in 2021 still do not feel as much control over their financial health as they do in other areas, with debt as a significant contributing factor. Eighty-three percent of US workers carry at least one form of debt, with a majority carrying several forms of debt concurrently. Credit card debt (54 percent) is the most common, followed by mortgage/home equity debt (40 percent) and utility, cell phone, or auto loan debt (38 percent).
Among workers who currently carry debt, the majority say their levels of debt impact their lives, jobs, and decision-making. Most workers feel their current level of financial stress affects their overall well-being (59 percent), expect that stress to remain the same or increase one year from now (68 percent), and agree this is an ongoing issue caused by factors other than COVID-19 (64 percent).
Additional Key Findings
- Among workers with student loan debt (19 percent of US workers), a large majority (76 percent) say they would have approached their education differently if they’d known they would accrue as much student loan debt as they did.
- More than 8 in 10 employees would be interested in a deferred annuity benefit, but only 2 percent of their employers offer such a benefit.
- Workers in 2021 were most interested in increased pay and increased 401(k) matching. Demand for increased salary jumped more than 10 percent from 2020, surpassing 401(k) matching as the most-desired benefit among American workers.
Methodology
This study was conducted by The Harris Poll on behalf of
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Source: Franklin Templeton