Canadian Employees’ Career Confidence Hits Record High In Right Management Survey

    Canadian employees are more confident about
    being able to find a comparable job if laid off than they were six months ago
    as the Right Management Career Confidence Index hit its highest level in the
    four years the survey has been conducted. The Canadian index reached 57.5, up
    from 54.8 last May, according to the survey of 520 full-time employees
    conducted for Right Management.

    More Canadian employees said it would be “somewhat easy” or “very easy”
    for an unemployed worker to find another job at the same salary – 33.5
    percent, up from 26.5 percent last May. Fewer employees said it would be “very
    difficult” for an unemployed worker to find similar employment if laid off,
    19.5 percent, down from 27.5 percent last May.

    However, there was a slight increase in the number of Canadian employees
    who feel it is somewhat or very possible they could be laid off from their
    jobs in the coming year – 18.2 percent, up from 17.5 percent last May.
    Conversely, there were slightly fewer employees who feel there is little or no
    chance they could be laid off in the next 12 months – 78.7 percent, down from
    79.5 percent last May.

    While fewer Canadian employees feel it would be “very difficult” to find
    similar employment if laid off, more say it would be “somewhat difficult” –
    44.2 percent, up from 41.6 percent last May.

    “Canadian employees’ overall career confidence continued to be on the
    upward trend that began earlier this year, with more workers feeling secure
    about being able to find comparable employment if laid off,” said Bram Lowsky,
    Senior Vice President and General Manager of Right Management in Canada.

    “However, employees are also more concerned about future economic
    conditions, so there was a slight increase in the number who feel they may
    lose their jobs in the coming year,” Lowsky added. Even with a higher career
    confidence level, about two-thirds of respondents, 63.7 percent, still feel it
    would be difficult to find a comparable job if laid off, although that has
    decreased from 69.1 percent last May, and 70.7 percent in November 2005.

    According to Statistics Canada, the unemployment rate in Canada averaged
    6.2% in October. But this average number breaks down into quite a range
    coast-to-coast across the provinces. While Newfoundland’s October unemployment
    rate was quite high at 14.2% (8%, St. John’s) it was considerably lower, in
    contrast, in Alberta where the rate was 3.0% (3.2%, Calgary). Central Canada
    sat in the middle with Ontario’s unemployment rate of 6.4% (6.7%, Toronto).

    “Unemployment rates across Canada are a direct reflection of the local
    economies’ current conditions which are currently quite diverse,” Lowsky adds.
    “And the local economy must be taken into account when analyzing the current
    Career Confidence Index for Canada.”

    The survey covered nearly 9,100 workers in 18 countries. Among the
    survey’s major findings were:

    — Employees in Norway are once again the most confident workers in the
    world. Only 3.8 percent of Norway’s workers believe there is a chance they
    could lose their jobs in the coming year, while 95.5 percent say that is not
    at all possible. Following Norway, employees in Denmark are the second most
    confident in the world, with only 4.8 percent believing there is a chance they
    could lose their jobs in the coming year, while 93.4 percent say that is not
    at all possible.

    — The United Kingdom has replaced Germany as having the world’s most
    pessimistic workers. The UK had the lowest Career Confidence Index of any of
    the 18 countries surveyed – 45.3, a steep decline of 6.9 points, or 13
    percent, from an index reading of 52.2 in May 2006. Furthermore, the UK
    experienced the biggest increase in the percentage of employees who feel they
    could lose their jobs in the coming year. 30.4 percent of UK employees now
    feel they may lose their jobs within the next 12 months, up from 22.2 percent
    in May 2006.

    — German workers are the most pessimistic in the world about finding a
    similar job at a comparable salary if laid off. Just 6.3 percent of German
    employees feel it would be easy to find a similar job if laid off. In
    comparison, globally, 30.7 percent of full time employees feel it would be
    easy to find a comparable job.

    — American workers’ confidence in their job security during the past
    six months reached an all-time high. 80.8 percent of U.S. workers predicted
    there was little or no chance they would lose their jobs in the coming year –
    up from 80.3 percent in May 2006. More U.S. employees than ever in the history
    of the survey – 22.8 percent – feel it would be easy to find a similar job at
    the same pay if they were laid off, up from 18.9 percent last May.

    The survey asks workers two questions: how likely it is they could lose
    their jobs, and how easy or difficult it would be for the average person who
    was laid off from a job to find a similar job at the same pay.

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