TechHR
ex
L&D
UNPLUGGED
Sphere
About Us • Contact Us
People Matters ANZ
People Matters Logo
Login / Signup
People Matters Logo
Login / Signup
  • Current
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Research
  • Events
  • Videos
  • Webinars
  • Podcast

© Copyright People Matters Media Pte. Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

 

 

  • HotTopic
    HR Folk Talk FutureProofHR
  • Strategy
    Leadership Csuite StrategicHR EmployeeRelations BigInterview
  • Recruitment
    Employer Branding Appointments Permanent Hiring Recruitment
  • Performance
    Skilling PerformanceMgmt Compensation Benefits L&D Employee Engagement
  • Culture
    Culture Life@Work Diversity Watercooler SheMatters
  • Tech
    Technology HR Technology Funding & Investment Startups Metaverse
  • About Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Become a sponsor
  • Contact Us
  • Feedback
  • Write For Us

Follow us:

Privacy Policy • Terms of Use

© Copyright People Matters Media Pte. Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

People Matters Logo
  • Current
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Research
  • Events
  • Videos
  • Webinars
  • Podcast
Login / Signup

Categories:

  • HotTopic
    HR Folk Talk FutureProofHR
  • Strategy
    Leadership Csuite StrategicHR EmployeeRelations BigInterview
  • Recruitment
    Employer Branding Appointments Permanent Hiring Recruitment
  • Performance
    Skilling PerformanceMgmt Compensation Benefits L&D Employee Engagement
  • Culture
    Culture Life@Work Diversity Watercooler SheMatters
  • Tech
    Technology HR Technology Funding & Investment Startups Metaverse
50% of global workforce are excited or confident about the future: PwC Hopes & Fears 2021

Story • 6th Apr 2021 • Min Read

50% of global workforce are excited or confident about the future: PwC Hopes & Fears 2021

Employee RelationsLife @ Work#HRTech#HybridWorkplace#ReinventToReimagine

Author: Maia Jenkins Maia Jenkins
4.4K Reads
The PwC Hopes & Fears survey is one of the largest of its kind, surveying more than 32,500 workers across Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Kuwait. Malaysia, Netherlands, Poland, Qatar. Saudi Arabia. Singapore, South Africa, Spain, UAE, UK, US to gauge their expectations and anxieties over automation, diversity and inclusion, unemployment and skills

According to the latest PwC Hopes & Fears 2021 survey, released on April 1st, 50% of the world’s workforce are reportedly ‘excited or confident’ about the future. This news comes despite the disruptions of the last year, in which an estimated 114 million people lost their jobs according to the ILO. The PwC Hopes & Fears survey is one of the largest of its kind, surveying more than 32,500 workers across Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Kuwait. Malaysia, Netherlands, Poland, Qatar. Saudi Arabia. Singapore, South Africa, Spain, UAE, UK, US to gauge their expectations and anxieties over automation, diversity and inclusion, unemployment and skills of the future. 

Here are some of the key findings from the survey: 

Purpose-driven companies stand to attract top talent 

After a year of uncertainty, the results show respondents are keen to work for a purpose-driven company. Overall, 75% of workers worldwide want to work for organisations that will make a positive contribution to society. This feeling is particularly strong in China (87%), India (90%), and South Africa (90%). However, money is also important and respondents are pretty evenly split between choosing to maximize their income (54%) and choosing a job that makes a difference over more money (46%), speaking to the economic uncertainty caused by the pandemic as well. 

Age wasn’t such a defining factor in this and, as is clear in the table below, working for a job that makes a difference is important to the majority of age groups across the board: 

People are eager to learn, reskill and upskill 

A sizeable majority (77%) of respondents are eager to learn new skills or retrain, while 40% of workers say that they have improved their digital skills during the pandemic. Employers are, broadly speaking, supportive of their employees trying to improve their digital skills beyond their normal duties, with around a third (31%) of all respondents saying this has been the case for them. However, this proportion is far higher among those with a post-grad certification (46%) than those with technical qualifications (22%). Younger people were around twice as likely as older people to get opportunities to upskills and those in urban areas were 1.5 times as likely as those in smaller towns. In addition, high-risk industries such as retail or transport scored just 25% and 20% respectively in terms of receiving training opportunities, whereas 42% of those in banking said it was the case of them, indicating another possible area of disparity and discrimination. 

Discrimination remains a barrier to progress at work 

Despite the global attention focused on intolerance and injustice over the last year, half of respondents worldwide said they have experienced discrimination at work based on factors like their age, gender, sexual orientation race and/or ethnicity and religious beliefs. Specifically, 22% of workers say they missed out on a progression because of their age, and younger workers were just as likely as older people to experience discrimination. Commenting on these results, Bhushan Sethi, joint global leader of PwC’s people and organization practice said “if current patterns in access to training persist, upskilling will increase social inequality when it should be doing precisely the opposite.”

Anxieties persist over lack of stable work and replacement by automation

Some of the most striking findings come from the ongoing anxiety over automation and securing stable employment. Globally, 60% of respondents are worried that automation is putting many jobs at risk, 45% believe it’s putting jobs like theirs at risk and 39% think it’s likely that their job will be obsolete within five years. Even more strikingly, 48% of respondents believe traditional employment won’t be around in the future, and that we’ll sell our skills on a short-term basis to those who need them, presumably a nod to an increased use of gig workers or contingent workers. Furthermore, over half (56%) think few people will have stable, long-term employment in the future, but this figure leaps starkly to 81% who say the same in India. “As companies accelerate their automation plans and many jobs continue to be remote, employees across every sector will need to acquire new skills that enable them to think and work in different ways. The future isn’t a fixed destination. We need to plan for dynamic rather than static tomorrows,” said the authors of the report. Despite all these fears, 64% of global respondents are positive about technology and believe it presents more opportunities than risks. 

Increased flexibility and remote work will stay in high demand 

Another clear trend was that flexibility is the future when it comes to work models. In total, 72% of respondents who could work remotely said they prefer a hybrid combination of in-person and remote working and only 9% of the same group want to go back to full-time in person work with a commute. Over half (51%) believe tech innovations will transform the way people work over the next three to five years and close to half (44%) would agree to let their employer monitor their performance through sensors or wearable devices. 

“As leaders reimagine the offices of tomorrow, we expect the focus to be on increasing space where people can initiate, develop, and strengthen relationships. Where they can experience the culture and brand. And of course, where teams come together to brainstorm, collaborate, and problem solve,” said the report authors. 

Over a year into the pandemic, the PwC Hopes & Fears survey reveals the complex mixture of sentiments workers are feeling as they look towards the future with optimism and anxiety. Based on these results, it seems workers globally are eager to learn, committed to flexible work arrangements and interested in how technological innovations will transform their working lives both for the worse and for the better. 

 

Read More

Did you find this article helpful?


You Might Also Like

Return to office: the legalities

STORY • 30th Apr 2025 • 3 Min Read

Return to office: the legalities

Employee Relations#EmploymentLaw
Employees tired of subpar workplace practices

STORY • 14th Apr 2025 • 4 Min Read

Employees tired of subpar workplace practices

Employee Relations
The "Great Resignation" 3 years down the road

STORY • 9th Apr 2025 • 3 Min Read

The "Great Resignation" 3 years down the road

Employee Relations
NEXT STORY: Starbucks to invest in creating fairer employee promotion process

Trending Stories

  • design-thinking-hr

    Skype is dead: Did Microsoft's leadership let a billion-doll...

  • design-thinking-hr

    Keeping the C-suite in the C-suite - how do we reduce execut...

  • design-thinking-hr

    Return to office: the legalities

  • design-thinking-hr

    The trust factor: Why modern leaders can’t afford to overl...

People Matters Logo

Follow us:

Join our mailing list:

By clicking “Subscribe” button above, you are accepting our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Company:

  • About Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Become a sponsor
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Contact:

  • Contact Us
  • Feedback
  • Write For Us

© Copyright People Matters Media Pte. Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

Get the latest Articles, Insight, News & Trends from the world of Talent & Work. Subscribe now!
People Matters Logo

Welcome Back!

or

Enter your registered email address to login

Not a user yet? Lets get you signed up!

A 5 digit OTP has been sent to your email address.

This is so we know it's you. Haven't received it yet? Resend the email or then change your email ID.

People Matters Logo

Welcome! Let's get you signed up...

Starting with the absolulte basics.

Already a user? Go ahead and login!

A 5 digit OTP has been sent to your email address.

This is so we know it's you. Haven't received it yet? Resend the email or then change your email ID.

Let's get to know you better

We'll never share your details with anyone, pinky swear.

And lastly...

Your official designation and company name.