Expedia’s 2013 Vacation Deprivation Study Reveals Global Disparity in Work-Life Balance Attitudes

Americans Given 14 Days Off and Take 10, Leave Twice As Many Days Unused As Last Year; French Take All 30 Available Days While Also Feeling Most Vacation-Deprived

Expedia.com®, the world's leading online travel company, today released the results of the 2013 Vacation Deprivation® study, an annual analysis of vacation habits among 8,535 employed adults across 24 countries and five continents. The study was conducted online by Harris Interactive. Now in its 13th year, the Vacation Deprivation study reveals a stark difference in attitudes towards work-life balance between countries.

Expedia first commissioned Vacation Deprivation in 2000 to examine the vacation habits of Americans. In 2005, Expedia began comparing such habits across countries. The 2013 edition is the most comprehensive to date, including 24 countries in total. Full details of the 2013 Vacation Deprivation study can be found here: http://viewfinder.expedia.com/features/2013-vacation-deprivation-study.

"No one retires wishing they'd spent more time at their desk," said John Morrey, vice president and general manager, Expedia.com. "There are countless reasons that vacation days go unused – failure to plan, worry, forgetfulness, you name it. But rested employees are more productive employees, so taking regular vacations may well help the company more than failing to do so."

Advertisements
  • eHotelier Essentials Banner

The 2013 Vacation Deprivation study found that:

Americans treat vacations as a luxury rather than a right. Over the past year, Americans were afforded 14 days of vacation and took 10, leaving 4 days on the table, twice as many as the year prior. There are currently just over 144 million employed Americans (144,303,000 according to recent BLS data), meaning that Americans collectively failed to take more than five hundred million (577,212,000) available days of vacation.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the French lead the world in vacationing, taking all 30 possible days available to them. At the same time, a full 90% of employed French adults either strongly or somewhat agree with the sentence, "I feel vacation deprived," well above the global average. The feeling of vacation deprivation is also prevalent in Italy (83%), Spain (78%) and Germany (74%), despite the fact that Europeans are afforded more vacation time than any other region.

Norwegians, by a wide margin, feel no such thing: only 17% of Norwegians describe feeling vacation-deprived. Similarly, less than half of employed adults from Ireland (49%), the UK (47%), the Netherlands (41%), Malaysia (47%), Sweden (44%), Denmark (39%) and Mexico (38%) say they feel vacation-deprived.

Asian and American attitudes towards vacation are similar. While the Japanese are given a relatively robust 18 vacation days (the global average is 20), they only take 7. At 7 days taken, Japan joins South Korea as the most vacation-deprived nations in the study; South Koreans also take 7 of a possible 10 days. Thais take only 8 out of 11 possible days, while Malaysians take 14 of 17.

For many, the beach is just a sandy office. Many vacationers bring work with them, either by design or by habit. 93% of the French claim to "constantly, regularly or sometimes" check work emails and voicemails while on holiday. 94% of Indians, 92% of Thais, 91% of Malaysians and 91% of Mexicans do the same.

Americans take a more relaxed view towards work connectivity; approximately two thirds (67%) of vacationing Americans remain tethered to the office. Only 43% of Germans and 46% of the British remain tightly connected to work while on break.

Worldwide, 65% of people feel that their bosses are supportive of vacation. Fully three out of four (76%) American bosses are perceived by their employees to be supportive. The most supportive bosses compared to most countries are in Norway (88%), Sweden (80%), New Zealand (76%) and the United States (76%). Less than half in South Korea (44%), Italy (44%), Thailand (47%) and Germany (49%) say their bosses are supportive.

The reasons that many workers leave vacation days unused are myriad. The most commonly cited reason is a desire to stockpile: 25% of those who leave vacation days unused report that they "like to accumulate vacation days for trips that I may take in the future." Among other reasons:

  • Complex scheduling: 22% say it is "difficult to coordinate a time that works for me and my spouse/partner/family";
  • Financial opportunism: 18% report that they can be paid for unused vacation days, a practice common in India (37%), Brazil (30%) and Spain (27%);
  • Financial worry: 16% believe they simply cannot afford a vacation;
  • Failure to plan: 15% say that if they don't schedule vacations far enough in advance, they never seem to be able to take all of it;
  • Plain old work: 11% say that work is "their life" and that it is hard to get away;
  • Workplace insecurity: 8% report they feel "important work decisions" will be made in their absence;
  • Mean bosses: 8% feel taking every available day will be perceived negatively.

Once they do get away, most find it easy to relax almost immediately. Worldwide, 48% say they leave work behind "as soon as I leave on vacation," while 20% do so the moment they arrive at their destination. Only 10% of respondents say they are "never" able to fully relax on holiday. That is most true of the Japanese – 18% of Japanese workers claim they never relax with Thais (15%), Indians (13%) and South Koreans (13%) having similar sentiments.

About the Survey

This Expedia survey was conducted online from August 20 to September 12 across Europe, North America, Brazil and Asia Pacific by Harris Interactive among 8,535 respondents over the age of 18. In order to qualify to take the full survey, respondents had to be employed full time, part time or self-employed. Respondents who did not meet these qualifications were directed to the demos. The survey Interviews were conducted in English, British English, Portuguese, French, French Canadian, Malay, Dutch, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mexico LATAMSP, Norwegian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Hong Kong, Austria-German and Danish.

Weighting

Figures for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, region and household income were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for respondents' propensity to be online. Each country was weighted using propensity scores and/or demographic data to reflect the country's employed adult population as a whole. Exceptions to this are Brazil, India, Thailand and Mexico, which were weighted to reflect the online employed populations of each country. In India, only three regions were surveyed: Delhi (n=95), Mumbai (n=100), and Hyderabad/Chennai/Bangalore (n=106). These three regions were then weighted together to reflect their population size. For the global 24-country total, an additional post-weight was applied to adjust for the relative size of each country's adult population.

About Expedia.com

Expedia.com

Expedia.com is the world's leading online travel site, helping millions of travelers per month easily plan and book travel. Expedia.com (http://www.expedia.com/, 1-800-EXPEDIA) aims to provide the latest technology and the widest selection of vacations, cheap tickets, hotel deals, car rentals, destination weddings, cruise deals and in-destination activities, attractions, services and travel apps. With the Expedia Best Price Guarantee, Expedia.com customers can get the best rates available online for all types of travel. Whether you want to relax in St. Lucia, explore Myrtle Beach or kick off the ski season in Jackson Hole, we know every trip and every traveler is unique and we want to help you Find YoursTM.

Contact: Sarah Gavin, Expedia.com

sgavin@expedia.com / (425) 679-8917

About Harris Interactive

Harris Interactive is one of the world's leading market research firms, leveraging research, technology, and business acumen to transform relevant insight into actionable foresight. Known widely for The Harris Poll®, Harris offers proprietary solutions in the areas of market and customer insight, corporate brand and reputation strategy, and marketing, advertising, public relations and communications research across a wide range of industries. Additionally, Harris has a portfolio of multi-client offerings that complement our custom solutions while maximizing a client's research investment. Serving clients worldwide through our North American and European offices, Harris specializes in delivering research solutions that help our clients stay ahead of what's next. For more information, please visit www.harrisinteractive.com.

Expedia, Expedia.com, Expedia Rewards, Find Yours and the Airplane logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Expedia, Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries. © 2013 Expedia, Inc. All rights reserved. CST # 2029030-50

Contact: Devon Nagle, HL Group (for Expedia)

Source: Hotel-Online

eHotelier logo
Great Leadership Starts and Ends with This
eHotelier logo
National Survey Reveals Booking Meeting Space Offsite Takes Up to Two or More Hours for Some