Checking work e-mails at home? It's part of the job for most Americans


  • TECH
  • Wednesday, 08 Jul 2015

NECESSARY EVIL: More than half of adults questioned in a 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair survey said checking e-mails outside office hours was routine.

NEW YORK: Checking e-mails at home is just part of the job for most Americans, who would also prefer to receive money rather than more paid vacation or sick days, according to a poll.

More than half of adults questioned in a 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair survey said monitoring e-mails outside office hours was routine, compared to 38% who said it was unnecessary.

But younger Americans were more willing to keep in touch on work issues at home. Nearly 70% of employees under 30 years old said it wasn't a problem but the number dropped to 52% for workers 30 and older.

"Americans are definitely workaholics," Cullen Murphy, editor-at-large for Vanity Fair, said in an interview. "Maybe the overall message of this poll is that there is a kind of bedrock faith in the idea that working hard pays off."

Most Americans, given the choice when starting a new job, said they would prefer an extra US$20,000 (RM76,330) rather than four more weeks of vacation. Only 32% would opt for the extra time.

Sixty three percent of US workers said they would choose getting paid for leftover sick days, rather than having time off for them.

When questioned about whether working men or women with children have a healthier work-life balance, 51% said women did, compared to 37% who said it was men.

If Americans did have some spare time, 30% said they looked for work to do to occupy themselves and an equal number said they used the free hours to exercise.

"They not only look for things to do. They look for things to do that are work related," said Murphy. "For me, it plays into a national characteristic of being busy, being productive and improving yourself."

Only 20% said they would use the free time to read.

If Americans could choose which kind of additional time off they could have, 26% said they wished they could take more vacations without kids and 23% would prefer more maternity/paternity leave.

But perhaps the most telling question in the poll was the choice of which animal was most like them. More than half selected worker bee, over butterfly or shark, and only 4% identified with sloth.

One thousand adults were questioned in the telephone poll which has error rate of plus or minus three percentage points. — Reuters

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