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Colleagues take part in an online meeting; half of employees say they are overworked during the lockdown.
Colleagues take part in an online meeting; half of employees say they are overworked during the lockdown. Photograph: Photographer, Basak Gurbuz Derman/Getty Images
Colleagues take part in an online meeting; half of employees say they are overworked during the lockdown. Photograph: Photographer, Basak Gurbuz Derman/Getty Images

Crisis, what crisis? Bosses thrive in lockdown while their workers suffer

This article is more than 3 years old
Torsten Bell

Research shows business leaders are earning more and taking more time off but the picture is different for employees

Lockdown means we’re all losing touch with just about everyone. I vaguely remember these things called friends, but frankly “normality” is now such a long time ago that the details are blurry. In this out-of-touch Olympics, it turns out there is, however, a clear winner: bosses.

A gold medal is the bosses’ reward for living on an entirely different planet from their workers (everywhere except for the Resolution Foundation, obviously). At least that’s the takeaway from a global survey by Microsoft that polled 30,000 people from 31 countries, focusing on office work that has moved online. The Work Trend Index found that 62% of business leaders were personally “thriving” during the pandemic. The lucky things were also more likely to be earning more and to have been able to take more of their annual leave.

Back in the real world, more than half of employees recorded being overworked, with more than four in 10 planning to leave their jobs. The young have been most likely to lose their jobs in the crisis, but even those keeping them have suffered more from the move to remote working; 60% of those aged 18-25 report they are flat-out struggling or merely surviving.

The takeaway for bosses? Time to recognise it’s a bit easier to chillax mid-Covid if you’re at the top of the office food chain and a lot harder to realise your workers are unhappy when they’re sitting in their bedrooms, rather than grumbling by the watercooler.

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