NUMBERS
Friday, August 31, 2007
Filed under: Numbers
Americans Satisfied at Work
As summer winds down and Labor Day approaches, The American will look this week at what Americans think about their jobs and vacation time. The Gallup Organization has asked an identical question about job satisfaction each year since 1989, and the results are remarkably consistent. Around nine in ten employed Americans are completely or somewhat satisfied with their jobs. When asked specifically, workers tell the polling organization that they like most aspects of their work. Satisfaction with coworkers rates most highly, and though satisfaction with compensation is somewhat lower, most workers—75 percent in 2006—say they are satisfied with their pay. Two surveys taken 20 years apart asked the identical question about job satisfaction and found that around 65 percent would take the same job again "without hesitation."
Source: The Gallup Organization, latest that of August 2006.
Vacation Time
Continuing a Labor Day series on Americans' attitudes toward work and leisure, today The American turns from job satisfaction to vacation time.
Source: The Gallup Organization, latest that of August 2006.
Better Bosses?
Wrapping up a Labor Day series on Americans' attitudes toward work and leisure, today The American examines how workers view their bosses. In 2006,
Source: The Gallup Organization, latest that of August 2006.
An Elusive Ideal?
Being single, it seems, has never been better. The percentage of American adults who are married is decreasing. And when asked in July whether it was "possible for a woman to have a complete and happy life if she remains single,” 79 percent of participants answered affirmatively. When asked the same question about men, 69 percent of participants said it was possible. Still, when the same poll asked unmarried participants about their preference for marriage, 56 percent expressed a desire to tie the knot.
Source: Pew Research Center, 2007.
Disaster Response
Source: CBS News Poll, 2007.