
Public
release date: 5-May-2008
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Contact: Wayne Hochwarter
whochwar@cob.fsu.edu
850-644-7849
Florida State University
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Wayne Hochwarter, the Jim Moran Professor of Management at Florida
State University's College of Business.
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. --
Rising gas prices are affecting more than the family budget. More pain at
the pump results in more employee stress on the job, says Wayne Hochwarter,
the Jim Moran Professor of Management at Florida State University’s College
of Business.
“People concerned with the effects of gas
prices were significantly less attentive on the job, less excited about
going to work, less passionate and conscientious and more tense,” Hochwarter
said. “These people also reported more ‘blues’ on the job. Employees were
simply unable to detach themselves from the stress caused by escalating gas
prices as they walked through the doors at work.”
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Rising gas prices are affecting the productivity and morale of
employees.
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Hochwarter gleaned the
information by surveying more than 800 full-time employees this spring when
gas prices hovered at about $3.50 per gallon. All of the people surveyed
work in a wide range of occupations, primarily in the southeastern United
States. All drove personal transportation to work and had an average commute
of 15 miles each way.
Survey respondents said gas prices were
foremost on their mind, including a disgruntled factory worker who wrote, “I
spend more time at work trying to figure out what I need to give up to keep
gas in my tank than thinking about how to do my job.”
Hochwarter’s research will be submitted for
publication later this summer. Among his findings:
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Fuel gauge.
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Hochwarter’s
discussions with employees confirm the study’s results. Many employees
report that gas prices rank as the No. 1 water-cooler discussion topic,
ahead of family, sports or work, he said. He found little difference in
responses among different ages, gender, work tenure and occupations.
“Several employees said they simply could not
escape the media onslaught of bad news regarding the future of gas prices,
and many reported their financial futures were looking bleaker and bleaker,”
Hochwarter said.
As gas prices rise, so does the stress.
Consider the words of Sandy, a medical records clerk: “The more it goes up,
the more behind I get. If gas goes up to $5 or $6 a gallon, I just don’t
know what I’ll do.”
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