When I worked at Wang Labs during the late 1980's, the company was spiraling downward. In what was a stressful environment to begin with - overly bureaucratic, insanely hierarchical, incredibly cheap (when you traveled on business, you had to do so on your own time and you had to take the cheapest flight, even if it involved multiple stops and flying you 1,000 miles out of your way) - the lack of clear direction, the cost cutting measures, the habitual layoffs layered more stress onto an already dire situation.
Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford School of Business, argues that work is exacting an even greater price than we realize. More than 100,000 Americans die each year from adverse workplace conditions, he says. And many more become sick. (Source: Boston Globe)
It’s a much broader phenomenon ― encompassing office workers, as well as traditionally high-stress jobs like nurses and first responders. Pfeffer estimates that “workplace management” was, as of 2018, the fifth leading cause of death in the United States.
“I think we are on an unsustainable path. I think we were on an unsustainable path pre-pandemic. The pandemic’s made everything worse, and something’s got to give,” he says.
Pfeffer says it's time to stop blaming the workers for not being able to cope with stress in any way other than quitting or dropping dead. Time to start making employers accountable for the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad working conditions in their companies.
That sort of blame is absolutely backwards. The onus should be on employers.
What's causing all this death and destruction?
People are working longer hours. They're under pressure to become more and more productive. (C.f., peeing in a bottle so they can work more.) The expectation that, in return for some flexibility - working from home, taking an hour off here and there to take the kid to the dentist - employers expect employees to be always on. Three a.m. e-mail? Where ARE you???
“The economic toll, in terms of lost productivity, lost good years of life, lost days, increased medical expenses,” Pfeffer says, “is on an unsustainable path, and it needs to be stopped. And therefore you need some combination of legislation, regulation, and litigation.”
...According to Pfeffer, the answer is to make employers take better care of the people who work for them.
He says that there are lots of reliable, tested, scientific measurements that could gauge employee wellbeing. And he makes a provocative argument: We should hold companies responsible “for the mental and physical health and the wellbeing of their employees. As you would do for the environment.”
“And if you make them ill, we’re going to fine you... If you dump a bunch of crap into the water, we’re going to hold you responsible for that damage. Same parallel. We should treat human sustainability exactly the same way as we treat environmental sustainability,” he says.
...If, as a culture, we agree that the cost of workplace stress has gotten too high, Pfeffer believes that action will have to come from both citizens and government leaders.“If you wait for companies to do this on their own,” he says, “good luck.”
Good luck is right.
I know that Wang Labs was a long time ago, but they wouldn't even clean up a loogie in the stairwell or wipe the dried boogers off the wall.
Hope things have improved, but I have my doubts that companies, for all their lip service about employee wellbeing, will do all that much about it.
Hope I'm wrong...
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