If you think the Great Resignation is over, think again.
The latest snapshot of the job market by recruiting giant Robert Half shows that more Generation Z workers are likely to change jobs in 2023 than last year.
About 60% of 18- to 25-year-olds said they would likely to change jobs in early 2023, up from 53% last year. More than 50% of employees with two to four years at a company and working parents also said they were looking.
The trend worries hiring managers and is leading companies to bolster retention efforts in a stubbornly tight job market.
As the U.S. economy emerged from pandemic disruption in 2021, nearly 50 million people quit their jobs, a record. Even more workers — 50.5 million, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — resigned last year.
The youngest workers came out of the pandemic wanting bigger paychecks — and then "an extremely flexible work schedule." Work-life balance was most important for 45% of Gen Z and 40% of millennials, said Jennifer Carlson, vice president and region director of Robert Half for the Twin Cities.
In contrast, only 30% of surveyed baby boomers insisted on flexible schedules during their job hunt.
"We do know there are clear preferences for younger people to work in as agile and flexible a work situation as they can find," Carlson said. "That is clear as a bell."