Financial stress can hit employees at any stage of their career. The anxiety that accompanies that stress can affect their mental wellness, which in turn can influence their productivity and workplace wellness.
For the sake of both employees and employers, it’s wise to understand workers’ money worries, particularly now when COVID-19 is causing even deeper financial concerns for many people. When the issues are understood, employers can take steps to ease employee financial anxiety, improving their overall mental and physical health, allowing them to focus on the tasks at hand in the workplace.
The PricewaterhouseCoopers’ (PwC) 2020 Employee Financial Wellness Survey gives a helpful overview of what full time U.S. employees’ financial concerns are at the moment. The survey was conducted in January 2020, before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, but compiled after it became obvious the pandemic would further worry American workers about finances. So, the report from the survey focuses on the findings that are most relevant to the potential impact of COVID-19 on employees’ financial well-being.
What the survey found was that 38% of all employees are unprepared for a financial emergency, meaning they had less than $1,000 saved to deal with emergency expenses. Broken down by generation, Generation Z is the most unprepared with 68% of the youngest working adults not ready for unexpected expenses. Thirty-eight percent of millennials and baby boomers are financially unprepared for an emergency and 34% of Generation X does not have at least a $1,000 emergency fund.
Retirement finances can also cause stress in employees. Fifty-nine percent of the oldest workers, the baby boomers, have less than $100,000 in retirement savings. Members of Generation X fare a little better than boomers—55% of them have less than $100,000 saved. Another concern for those with retirement accounts is that a financial emergency will cause them to dip into those funds before retirement, leaving less to live on in their later years.
Millennial employees as a whole have another financial worry that many of their older coworkers don’t have to deal with—student loan debt. It’s estimated, according to Forbes, that as of Q2 of the 2019 fiscal year, about 15.1 million millennial borrowers had a cumulative $497.6 billion in outstanding student loan debt, or about $33,000 per borrower.
These concerns about money can weigh heavily on an employee’s mind. Fifty-eight percent of the employees in the PwC survey say they are stressed about finances, and 50% say that financial stress has been a distraction at work.
The COVID-19 pandemic has only heightened workers’ financial worries. Yahoo reports that a survey done by Edelman Financial Engines about a month into the health crisis in the U.S. found that job stability is now an increasing worry as workers become laid off, furloughed or face reduced hours. Almost 85% of workers said they were concerned about losing the income from their job and 46% said they were concerned about their spouse’s job.
Many companies have initiatives in place for managing the physical and mental wellness of their employees. Since financial stress can create both physical and mental illness in workers, employers should add initiatives that assist their team’s financial wellness, too.
At Spring Health, we can supplement or replace your company’s traditional EAP with the most comprehensive, effective solution for employee well-being, one that incorporates financial wellness into the program. Contact us to request a demo today.