Florida Has One Of The Least Overworked Cities In The US
With employee burnout from being overworked a very real issue for those trying to combat the recent run of inflation, some cities actually have it much worse than others. So with Florida’s high cost of living including housing and insurance at the fore front, why are workers in other states much more overworked than Florida residents? The folks at FinanceBuzz compiled the data.
The study looked to uncover the areas with the most overworked population by studying such data as the average amount of time working + commuting each week. If getting to and from work is an hour each way, your 40 hour a week job is actually 50. Households where two or more people are working. Is more than one person in the home working full time? Working more than 50+ weeks a year. Not getting downtime can certainly lead to being overworked. Workers over the age of 65. Workers with more than one job. And finally, they checked Google Trends for people researching side hustles.
Overworked
The most overworked city in the US is Denver, Colorado where almost 62% of households have 2 or more people working full time to pay the bills. Dallas, Texas is second where the commute adds to the workweek as well as an older workforce. In Dallas, “25.4% of people over traditional retirement age are still working in the city.”
Relax
And now on to the least overworked. Number one on the list is Detroit, Michigan. Only 13.5% of the workforce is 65 or older. Detroiters also take their vacations, the city has the lowest percentage of workers that are in the office at least 50 weeks per year — just 77.1%. Detroit is also one of the most unionized cities in America, which helps to that point. The second least on this study is Florida’s state capitol of Tallahassee. No state has a lower percentage of workers with two or more jobs than Florida (3.4%), and in Tallahassee, work and commute time comes out to just 38.95 hours per week. You can’t be overworked if you’re not at work. Must be all the politicians, right?
Other Florida cities that popped out on the list are Fort Lauderdale, where 88% of workers are at the job 50+ weeks a year. In Miami and Jacksonville where only 3.4% of workers have 2 or more jobs. Or Tampa, where work + commute time is only 43 hours a week.
Daily Commute
It seems one of the biggest factors to being overworked is the commute time. And I speak from experience. When I first moved to Southwest Florida I drove daily from Naples to Estero. Too often I was stuck on 75 and spent more of my day in the car than I wanted. Moving closer to the office allowed me more time with family, and a less overworked feeling.