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Fortune article on generational burnout at work sparks firestorm on social media

The amalgamation of global issues, personal life struggles, and career stagnation is driving economic inactivity among young workers

A silhouetted person sits at a desk, resting their forehead on their hand, appearing stressed or burned out.

Photo Credit: iStock

An article published last September by Fortune written by business author and New York University professor Suzy Welch questioned prevailing views on the perceived lack of career rewards for Gen Z and Millennial workers. 

The article has since sparked a firestorm on social media platform X, with several users across the generational scale sharing their experiences as the topic began trending anew on March 30.

What's happening?

In the September article, Welch argued that the burnout experienced by younger workers isn't so much a product of work intensity as it is the diminished expectations for career rewards. 

In other words, younger workers are doing the same amount of work as their elder Gen X and Boomer counterparts, but as some X users said, they lack the fundamental belief that hard work will lead to meaningful career advancement.

Welch recounts a conversation she had with a 25-year-old freelance worker who expressed concerns about worker fatigue and burnout, sharing that Welch used to work seven-day workweeks. "But you had hope," the young worker retorted.

"We believed that if you worked hard you were rewarded for it. And so this is the disconnect," Welch said on the Masters of Scale podcast.

Why is workplace burnout significant?

Unlike earlier generations who could reasonably anticipate homeownership and financial security through consistent work, younger employees face systemic obstacles that have significantly changed career trajectories.

This burnout crisis among young people can be contextualized by multiple world-altering crises all at once: climate change, political instability, ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, economic uncertainty, and international conflicts. As one X user said, "it's easy to feel burnt out when the world is on fire."

On an individual scale, Millennials and Gen-Zers are also juggling care for their children and aging parents with mental health struggles, substantial student debt, and the rising cost of living. Poor well-being goes beyond how workers feel; it affects everything from the number of sick days taken to their job performance.

And in the age of ever-evolving artificial intelligence technologies, many young people are also struggling with the "tsunami" strike of AI disrupting the workplace and playing a role in massive layoffs.

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The amalgamation of global issues, personal life struggles, and career stagnation is driving economic inactivity among young workers, which can have dire impacts on the global economy.

A PwC report found that of the 4,000 U.K. adults interviewed, 1 in 10 workers are actively considering leaving work, citing mental health concerns. To put this into perspective, this equates to over 4 million individuals, just in the U.K., who are on the brink of leaving the workforce.

What's being done to change these perceptions among younger generations?

This generational divide in workplace satisfaction and burnout has significant economic consequences, with Gallup estimating that businesses lose $322 billion annually in turnover and reduced productivity. 

As Millennial and Gen Z employees continue to shape the global workforce, Welch's perspective on hope may offer a valuable lens for understanding the limitations of traditional approaches to addressing workplace stress for younger Americans.

Hope may only be fostered by these younger generations with employers prioritizing mental health resources, providing adequate healthcare options to workers and their families, and regulating AI to ensure it enhances workflows, along with nationwide efforts to address student debt, make affordable housing more accessible, and reduce the cost of living.

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