Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Business

Voluntary Employee Departures Spike 41 Percent in 2021

Photo courtesy of Saulo Mohana.

A British-American multinational professional services firm reported a 41 percent spike in voluntary employee departures last year amid the “Great Resignation” in the United States. They reached this conclusion according to data from the firm’s Salary Increase and Turnover Study. Aon, a leading global professional services firm, reported 21.8 percent of U.S. employees left their jobs in 2021.

An increase in voluntary employee departures

Out of that 21.8 percent people who left their job last year, 17.2 percent departed voluntarily. In 2020, 19.7 percent left employers, of which 11.9 percent departed voluntarily.  

“The spike we’ve seen in voluntary departures quantifies the challenges employers face during this period we call the ‘Great Resignation,'” said Michael Burke, CEO for Human Capital Solutions at Aon. “Employers must look to the underlying root cause and not merely treat the symptoms. They will need to review total rewards strategies and look at resilience, agility, wellbeing and purpose in order to retain and attract top talent in their respective industries. A tight labor market will continue to challenge employers in the near term.”

Related: CareerSource Tampa Bay Launches Summer Jobs Program 

Figures come from Aon’s Human Capital Solutions bi-annual Salary Increase and Turnover Study. This is a global survey of nearly 2,000 employers. The report provides insights on salary increases and employee retention powered by industry-leading data. It also shows analytics that reflects how broader economic circumstances impact the talent landscape.

The study also shows:

  • Average budgeted salary increases in 2022 reached 5.2 percent, up from 4.5 percent last year in the U.S. This includes merit raises and promotions.
  • Forty percent of U.S. employers say they will hire aggressively in 2022. But 46 percent plan to hire at a normal pace, 13 percent will be very selective and 1 percent will freeze hiring.
  • Energy (10.6 percent), construction (15 percent) and financial services (15.6 percent) had the lowest voluntary departure rates among industries measured.

The report includes measurable data samples from 10 industries. This includes business consulting, construction/real estate, energy, entertainment, financial services, life sciences, manufacturing, retail/hospitality, technology and transportation.

“We use these data insights to provide advice and solutions that give employers from an array of industries the clarity and confidence needed to make better decisions to protect and grow their business,” said Michael Deeks, global head of the data business for Human Capital Solutions at Aon.  “It’s a hot job market out there and as a result, we are seeing turnover grow and many companies allocate more money in their salary budgets.”

Click here to see the full report.

More stories on Modern Globe

You May Also Like

Culture

The popular refrain in you hear in Tampa Bay is that the area has not been directly hit by a major hurricane in over...

Business

Black Friday and Cyber Monday shoppers are hot on the trail of the best deals this holiday season. But do you know when a...

Business

Today, the U.S. economy looks very different than it did hundreds of ago. While railroad stocks dominated in the 19th century, industries within technology...

Culture

It’s been over a century since a major hurricane (category 3 or greater) has made landfall in the Tampa Bay Area. That was the...