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Australia – Overtime up in 33% of workplaces last year

19 July 2021

Overtime increased in 33% of organisations in Australia over the past 12 months, according to new research from Hays Australia.

The study showed that 13% of organisations managed to decrease overtime over the past 12 months.

Of those organisations that increased overtime, 20% kept the average weekly additional hours to less than 5%. A further 38% increased overtime by between 5 and 10%, while 33% increased it by 10 to 20%. The final 9% saw overtime rise by more than 21% of the standard weekly hours worked.

“Last year, tight budgets forced employers to try to achieve more with less as they navigated their way through the crisis and back to growth,” Nick Deligiannis, Managing Director of Hays in Australia & New Zealand said. “But rising overtime is not a sustainable solution, especially when we know that further pressure will be placed on workforces in the year ahead. Almost two-thirds of employers say skills shortages will impact the effective operation of their organisation or department in the next 12 months.” 

“According to employers, the number one impact will be increasing workloads for existing staff (nominated by 62% of employers). This is a dangerous indicator for employers, who risk their employees’ engagement, retention, and physical and mental health when overtime becomes excessive,” Deligiannis added.

 “The main factor behind today’s skills shortage, they (employers) believe, is a lack of people gaining the necessary qualifications or experience,” Deligiannis said. “Encouraging more people to gain the qualifications and skills in demand and offering apprenticeships, traineeships, graduate programs and entry-level roles can help organisations overcome the skills shortage in the long term and, in doing so, reduce pressure on existing teams.

“In the meantime, employers could revise their sourcing strategy to attract skills in demand, whether they wish to add a new permanent team member to relieve the pressure on existing staff or a temporary candidate to assist at times of peak workloads,” Deligiannis added. “It’s also important to offer genuine work-life balance initiatives so that employees can focus on their health and wellbeing after periods of lengthy overtime.”