The Daily Telegraph

Workers take up ‘quiet quitting’ to do bare minimum in dull jobs

- By Henry Bodkin

A NEW phenomenon of “quiet quitting”, where employees do the bare minimum if they feel their jobs are not meaningful, is gripping the workforce, experts have said.

Encouraged by social media, workers who are uninspired are mentally “checking out” but learning to do just enough not to get sacked.

Academics believe that the trend has been driven in part by the pandemic, which prompted greater reflection on work-life balance.

This has left behind a “hustle culture mentality” and the long hours that came with it, they said.

However, the experts are warning that embracing a quiet-quitting approach may itself be the cause of poor job satisfacti­on.

It comes as global research for 2022 by Gallup showed that only 9 per cent of workers in the UK were engaged or enthusiast­ic about their work. That puts Britain 33rd out of 38 countries in Europe. Worldwide, one in five workers plan to quit their jobs in 2022, according to PWC’S Global Workforce Hopes and Fears Survey of more than 52,000 workers in 44 countries and territorie­s carried out in March.

Prof Maria Kordowicz, director of the centre for interprofe­ssional education and learning at the University of Nottingham, said: “The search for meaning has become far more apparent. There was a sense of our own mortality during the pandemic, something quite existentia­l around people thinking, ‘What should work mean for me?’.

“I think this has a link to the elements of quiet quitting that are perhaps more negative: mentally checking out from a job, being exhausted from the volume of work and lack of work-life balance that hit many of us during the pandemic.”

The concept of quiet-quitting has become popular on the social media video-sharing site Tiktok. Some believe it was inspired by the Chinese hashtag #Tangping, or lying down, which is now censored in China, a country experienci­ng a shrinking workforce. Prof Kordowicz added: “I think that can lead to less satisfacti­on at work, lack of enthusiasm, less engagement.

“So we could juxtapose ‘quiet quitting’ with ‘the great resignatio­n’. Do we stay put but switch off, or do we move towards something?”

According to the Gallup research, Europe has the lowest regional percentage of engaged employees, yet also the second-lowest percentage of employees who say they are likely to move in the next 12 months, suggesting it is fertile territory for quiet quitting.

Forty-one per cent of Britons included in the survey said they feel stress “a lot of the day”, with 15 per cent experienci­ng anger as a significan­t part of their daily emotional package, and 20 per cent sadness.

Jill Cotton, a trends expert at the recruitmen­t website Glassdoor, said: “Quietly quitting is often a sign that it’s time to move on from your role.”

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