Worldwide employee engagement fell to 21% in 2024, costing the world economy approximately $8.9 trillion annually, equal to approximately 9% of world GDP, while US nonfarm business labor productivity increased 2.1% for the full year 2025, per the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Together, they show a workforce more fragmented and less engaged than at any point since 2020.
Key Takeaways
- US nonfarm business productivity increased 2.1% in full-year 2025, per the BLS.
- Worldwide employee engagement sits at 21%, the lowest reading since 2020, according to Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace report.
- Manager-level engagement dropped from 30% to 27% in a single year, the steepest fall in any cohort Gallup tracks.
- Knowledge workers face an interruption every 2 minutes during core hours, totaling roughly 275 interruptions per day, per Microsoft’s 2025 WTI.
- Average post-interruption recovery time is 23 minutes 15 seconds, based on Gloria Mark’s UC Irvine attention research.
- AI users gain an average of 5.4% of working hours, equal to 2.2 hours per week on a 40-hour schedule, per Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis analysis.
- 80% of the world workforce reports lacking the time or energy for effective work, according to Microsoft’s 31,000-respondent WTI survey.
Editor’s Choice
- Low engagement costs the world economy approximately $8.9 trillion annually, equal to approximately 9% of world GDP, per Gallup.
- McKinsey estimates generative AI could deliver up to $4.4 trillion in annual productivity gains worldwide.
- Fully remote employees report 31% engagement, compared with 23% for hybrid and 19% for on-site non-remote-capable roles.
- Workers send 58 chat messages outside core hours daily, a 15% year-over-year increase tracked by Microsoft.
- Unproductive meetings consume an estimated 5 hours weekly per worker, double the 2019 baseline.
- Generative AI and current technologies could automate work activities that absorb 60% to 70% of employee time, per McKinsey research.
Recent Developments
- February 2026: Microsoft’s 2025 WTI, surveying 31,000 knowledge workers across 31 markets, reported 48% of employees and 52% of leaders describe their work as chaotic and fragmented.
- February 2025: The Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis published research quantifying generative AI time savings at 5.4% of working hours for adopters.
- Q4 2025: BLS reported nonfarm business productivity grew 1.8%, with unit labor costs up 4.4% and output rising 2.5% while hours worked rose 0.4%.
- 2024 (latest annual): Gallup’s worldwide engagement reading came in at 21%, with manager engagement at 27%, both at multi-year lows.
- 2025: McKinsey’s AI in the Workplace report documented near-universal enterprise interest in AI agents, with 82% of leaders expecting agents to expand workforce capacity within 18 months.
Global Productivity Growth Numbers
- US nonfarm business labor productivity climbed 2.1% for the full year 2025, per the BLS.
- Q4 2025 nonfarm business output increased 2.5%; hours worked rose 0.4%, per BLS.
- Q4 2025 nonfarm productivity increased 1.8%, per the BLS.
- Year-over-year (Q4 2024 to Q4 2025) productivity growth was 2.5%.
- Total factor productivity in the private nonfarm business sector rose 0.8% in 2025.
- Unit labor costs rose 4.4% in Q4 2025, outpacing productivity gains.
| Metric | 2025 Reading | Source |
| Nonfarm productivity (annual) | +2.1% | BLS |
| Nonfarm productivity (Q4 2025) | +1.8% | BLS |
| Output | +2.5% | BLS |
| Hours worked | +0.4% | BLS |
| Total factor productivity | +0.8% | BLS |
| Unit labor costs (Q4) | +4.4% | BLS |
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Productivity and Costs release
Cost of Employee Disengagement Globally
- Gallup estimates that low engagement costs the world economy approximately $8.9 trillion annually.
- That figure equals roughly 9% of world GDP.
- Global employee engagement fell to 21% in 2024, the lowest reading since 2020.
- Reaching best-practice engagement (around 70%) could add up to $9.6 trillion to global GDP, per Gallup modeling.
- The US shows 33% engagement, higher than the worldwide average but down from the 36% peak.
- Disengagement is concentrated in stressed sectors: customer service, the healthcare frontline, and retail.
| Region | Engagement Rate | Trend |
| Global | 21% | Falling |
| United States | 33% | Falling from 36% peak |
| Western Europe | 13% | Flat at low base |
| East Asia | 17% | Falling |
| Latin America | 31% | Flat |
Source: Gallup State of the Global Workplace 2025
By the numbers: Gallup estimates low employee engagement costs the world economy approximately $8.9 trillion annually, equal to approximately 9% of global GDP. Closing the gap to best-practice engagement (around 70%) could add up to $9.6 trillion in additional global output, closing that gap would unlock trillions in additional economic output.
Remote vs Hybrid vs On-Site Engagement Levels
- Fully remote employees show the highest engagement at 31%, per Gallup.
- Hybrid workers register 23% engagement.
- On-site remote-capable workers (could WFH but report to the office) sit at 23%.
- On-site non-remote-capable workers (essential frontline) sit at 19%.
- Despite higher engagement, fully remote employees report lower overall life thriving than hybrid peers.
- Remote teams record 41% of working hours in deep focus versus 31% for hybrid teams, per Insightful’s Lost Focus Report.
Remote work cybersecurity statistics track the same WFH cohort.
The Daily Interruption Problem at Work
- Knowledge workers face an interruption every 2 minutes during core work hours, per the Microsoft Work Trend Index 2025.
- Total daily interruption count averages 275 events from meetings, emails, and chats.
- Average recovery time after an interruption is 23 minutes 15 seconds, per Gloria Mark’s UC Irvine research.
- Three interruptions cost roughly an hour of productive work.
- After an interruption, workers take 27% more time to complete the original task and commit up to 2x as many errors.
- 48% of employees and 52% of leaders describe their work as chaotic and fragmented.
| Interruption Metric | Value | Source |
| Frequency during core hours | every 2 minutes | Microsoft Work Trend Index 2025 |
| Daily interruption count | 275 | Microsoft Work Trend Index 2025 |
| Recovery time per interruption | 23 min 15 sec | Gloria Mark, UC Irvine |
| Task completion delay post-interruption | +27% | Gloria Mark, UC Irvine |
| Workers describing work as chaotic | 48% | the Microsoft survey |
| Leaders describing work as chaotic | 52% | the Microsoft survey |
Source: Microsoft 2025 WTI Annual Report; Gloria Mark, UC Irvine attention research
Key finding: Microsoft’s 2025 WTI, drawing on a survey of 31,000 knowledge workers across 31 markets, found employees face 275 interruptions per day during core work hours. Each disruption requires an average 23 minutes 15 seconds of recovery time, per Gloria Mark’s UCI research. 48% of employees describe their work as chaotic and fragmented.
Our social media attention span statistics document the same pattern in consumer attention data.
Meeting Time and Productivity Loss Statistics
- Employees spend an average of 35 monthly hours in meetings, equal to roughly 9 hours per week.
- Time wasted in unproductive meetings has doubled since 2019 to 5 hours per week per worker.
- 35% of business meetings are considered a waste by attendees.
- 74% of employees report they would be more productive with fewer meetings.
- 45% of meeting attendees rate their meetings as productive (a minority).
- Globally, an estimated 24 billion hours are wasted in unproductive meetings each year.
Manager Engagement Has Fallen Faster Than Worker Engagement
- Global manager engagement dropped from 30% to 27% between 2023 and 2024, per Gallup.
- The 3-point manager decline outpaces the front-line worker decline.
- Manager burnout shows up first in performance-management dropoff (skipped 1:1s, late reviews).
- Front-line engagement strongly tracks manager engagement: a manager’s engagement explains roughly 70% of variance in team engagement, per Gallup’s longitudinal data.
- Managers under 35 show the steepest engagement falloff, dropping more than 5 points year-over-year.
- The US is among the few markets where female-manager engagement fell faster than male-manager engagement.
Fixing manager workload and autonomy is a higher-ROI lever than another all-hands engagement survey.
AI Adoption and Time Savings at Work
- AI users reclaim an average of 5.4% of work hours, equal to 2.2 hours per week on a 40-hour schedule, per Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis research.
- 27% of AI users reclaim 9-plus hours weekly.
- McKinsey estimates generative AI could add up to $4.4 trillion in annual worldwide productivity gains.
- Current AI capabilities could automate activities that absorb 60% to 70% of employee time today, per McKinsey.
- 90% of AI power users say AI makes their workload more manageable, per Microsoft research 2025.
- 82% of leaders expect AI agents to expand workforce capacity within 18 months.
| AI Productivity Metric | Value | Source |
| Average time savings | 5.4% of work hours | St Louis Fed |
| Average weekly hours saved | 2.2 hrs | St Louis Fed |
| Power users saving 9+ hrs/wk | 27% | St Louis Fed |
| Projected global GenAI gains | $4.4 trillion/year | McKinsey |
| Share of work time automatable | 60-70% | McKinsey |
| Leaders expecting AI agent capacity gains | 82% | Microsoft WTI 2025 |
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis (2025); McKinsey Economic Potential of Generative AI; Microsoft 2025 WTI
Why it matters: Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis research found generative AI users save an average 5.4% of work hours, equal to 2.2 hours per week on a 40-hour workweek. 27% of AI users save 9-plus hours weekly. McKinsey projects up to $4.4 trillion in annual worldwide productivity gains across the 63 use cases analyzed.
Our AI agents statistics track the agentic-AI deployment behind that expectation.
Remote Work Productivity Reality vs Office Work
- 77% of remote employees report higher productivity working offsite, per multi-survey averages.
- Fully remote employees complete 41% of their hours in deep focus, versus 31% for hybrid teams, per Insightful.
- The most common hybrid model in 2025 is 3 days office + 2 days remote, used by 39% of hybrid employees.
- 34% of hybrid employees now go in 4 days a week, up from 32% in 2024 and 23% in 2023.
- Remote-only workers post about 29 minutes of additional productivity per day versus hybrid and in-office peers.
- Despite higher productivity, fully remote employees report lower thriving on Gallup’s life-evaluation index.
| Arrangement | Productivity Signal | Source |
| Fully remote | +29 min/day vs office | Multiple surveys |
| Fully remote | 41% deep focus hours | Insightful |
| Hybrid | 31% deep focus hours | Insightful |
| Hybrid (3+2) | 39% of hybrid workers | Survey aggregation |
| Hybrid (4 days office) | 34%, up from 23% in 2023 | Survey aggregation |
Source: Insightful Lost Focus Report; Great Place to Work; Achievers remote work statistics aggregation
Task-deep roles favor remote; collaboration-deep roles favor office time. Our Microsoft 365 statistics data shows the same split.
Workforce Burnout and Capacity Strain Signals
- 80% of the world workforce reports lacking the time or energy for effective work, per Microsoft research 2025.
- 53% of leaders say productivity must increase, while only one in five workers says they have the capacity to deliver it.
- Workers send 58 chat messages outside of work hours daily, a 15% year-over-year increase.
- 48% of employees describe their work as chaotic and fragmented.
- “Continuous partial attention” patterns are documented across both remote and office cohorts.
- The average person checks their phone roughly 96 times per day, fragmenting attention even before workplace tools weigh in.
The off-hours messaging signal mirrors patterns we track in our social media screen time statistics data.
Productivity Differences by Industry and Role
- Information-sector productivity grew roughly 3.5% in 2025, the strongest of any major sector, per BLS sector data.
- Manufacturing productivity rose roughly 1.0% in 2025, below the all-sector average.
- Retail and food service productivity is roughly flat year-over-year.
- Healthcare frontline workers show the lowest engagement and the slowest measured productivity gains.
- Software development teams report the largest AI-driven time savings, with 27% of developer-cohort AI users banking 9-plus weekly hours.
- Customer-support roles show the second-largest AI gains, driven by GenAI summarization and draft-response tools.
| Sector | 2025 Productivity Growth |
| Information | ~+3.5% |
| Nonfarm business (all) | +2.1% |
| Manufacturing | ~+1.0% |
| Retail trade | ~flat |
| Health care | flat to slight negative |
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Productivity and Costs (sector releases)
Our AI job loss statistics show the same sectoral skew.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
US nonfarm business productivity rose 2.1% for the full year 2025, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Q4 2025 productivity rose 1.8%, with output up 2.5% and hours worked up 0.4%, per BLS.
Gallup estimates low employee engagement costs the world economy approximately $8.9 trillion annually, equal to approximately 9% of global GDP.
Fully remote workers record 41% of their hours in deep focus compared to 31% for hybrid teams, per Insightful research. Gallup engagement runs at 31% for fully remote workers, 23% for hybrid, and 19% for on-site non-remote-capable roles.
Microsoft’s 2025 WTI, surveying 31,000 knowledge workers across 31 markets, found employees face an interruption every 2 minutes during core hours, totaling 275 daily disruptions from meetings, chats, and emails. Average recovery time per interruption is 23 minutes 15 seconds per Gloria Mark’s UC Irvine research.
Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis research found that generative AI users save an average of 5.4% of work hours, equal to 2.2 hours per week on a 40-hour workweek. 27% of AI users save 9-plus hours weekly. McKinsey projects up to $4.4 trillion in global annual productivity gains across the 63 use cases analyzed.
Conclusion
US nonfarm productivity rose 2.1% for the full year 2025, per the BLS. Global engagement sits at 21%, and the cost of disengagement runs to approximately $8.9 trillion per year, per Gallup. Firms moving first on meeting reduction, manager support, and AI workflow design will convert the headline gain into lasting advantage.
