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Search resuls for: "Gallup didn't"


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22% of US workers say they worry technology will replace their jobs — an increase from 2021, Gallup says. Workers with concerns tend to be young, college-educated, and make under $100k a year. The growing fear comes as AI tools like ChatGPT can now perform job tasks like writing and coding. And when considering just college-educated workers, the rise in worry is even sharper: from 8% who were worried in 2021 to a whopping 20% who are worried today, the poll says. The rapid development of generative AI technology, the Gallup researchers say, "may be changing the stereotype of what computers can do in the workplace."
Persons: Gallup, Alexis Ohanian, it's, ChatGPT, Goldman Sachs, Gray, Emily Hanley, Suumit Shah, Gallup didn't Organizations: Service, Gallup, Challenger Locations: Wall, Silicon
Gallup says "quiet quitting," in which workers do the bare minimum, is a global phenomenon. Forty-four percent of respondents also said they'd experienced stress at work the previous day. Gallup's 2023 State of the Global Workplace report surveyed 122,416 employed respondents ages 15 and over in more than 160 countries from 2022 to 2023 and concluded that 59% of the workers worldwide were "quiet quitting." The report used respondents' answers to a series of 12 questions to split those surveyed into three categories at work: engaged, not engaged, and actively disengaged. Gallup's report estimated that such low engagement at work was costing the global economy $8.8 trillion, or 9% of global gross domestic product.
Persons: Gallup, they'd, , it'd, Gallup didn't, Gen Zers, Zers weren't Organizations: Service, Gallup, Deloitte
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