Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Reach Us
    • Career
    Subscribe Newsletter
    HR KathaHR Katha
    • Exclusive
      • Exclusive Features
      • Perspectives
      • Friday Features
      • herSTORY
      • Case-In-Point
      • Point Of View
      • Research
      • HR Pops
      • Dialogue
      • Movement
      • Profile
      • Beyond Work
      • Rising Star
      • By Invitation
    • News
      • Global HR News
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Diversity
      • Events
      • Gen Y
      • Hiring & Firing
      • HR & Labour Laws
      • Learning & Development
      • Merger & Acquisition
      • Performance Management & Productivity
      • Talent Management
      • Tools & Technology
      • Work-Life Balance
    • Special
      • HR Forecast 2026
      • Cover Story
      • Editorial
      • HR Forecast 2024
      • HR Forecast 2023
      • HR Forecast 2022
      • HR Forecast 2021
      • HR Forecast 2020
      • HR Forecast 2019
      • New Age Learning
      • Coaching and Training
      • Learn-Engage-Transform
    • Magazine
    • Reports
      • Whitepaper
        • HR Forecast 2024 e-mag
        • Future-proofing Manufacturing Through Digital Transformation
        • Employee Healthcare & Wellness Benefits: A Guide for Indian MSMEs
        • Build a Future Ready Organisation For The Road Ahead
        • Employee Experience Strategy
        • HRKatha 2019 Forecast
        • Decoding and Driving Employee Engagement
        • One Platform, Infinite Possibilities
      • Survey Reports
        • Happiness at Work
        • Upskilling for Jobs of the Future
        • The Labour Code 2020
    • Conferences
      • Leadership Summit 2025
      • Rising Star Leadership Awards
      • HRKatha Futurecast
      • Automation.NXT
      • The Great HR Debate
    • HR Jobs
    WhatsApp LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook Instagram
    HR KathaHR Katha
    zoha
    Home»Exclusive Features»Research»70% Indian workers experience high stress at least once a week
    Research

    70% Indian workers experience high stress at least once a week

    HRK News BureauBy HRK News BureauDecember 8, 20203 Mins Read6462 Views
    Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    Share
    LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp

    Seven in 10 Indian workers admit to experiencing stress at work at least once a week, according to a study by Always Designing for People (ADP), global payroll and HR leader recently.

    The findings of the research were revealed in ADP’s Global Workforce View 2020 Report, which explored employees’ attitudes and opinions towards the current world of work and their expectations and hopes from the workplace of the future.

    zoha

    Of the 1,908 workers surveyed in India, 70 per cent admitted to experiencing stress at least once during the working week on a regular basis. Levels of stress amongst the Indian workforce are significantly higher than the Asia-Pacific average of 60 per cent. The survey also found that Indians were amongst the most likely within APAC to discuss mental health problems at work. About 89 per cent respondents said they would be comfortable talking to someone at work about their mental health.

    Rahul Goyal, managing director, ADP India, said, “For business owners, leaders and managers, there is a duty of care to foster a work environment that prioritises its employees’ mental health and wellbeing. While being under pressure is a normal part of life, the number Indian workers reporting that they are experiencing stress on a weekly basis suggests we are falling short.”

    He maintained, “It is widely accepted that stress can cause or exacerbate existing mental health conditions, such as anxiety or depression. Mental health has a huge impact upon people, communities, businesses and the economy. Alongside the ethical considerations to creating a supportive and productive work environment, we know there is a strong business case to be made too.”

    A 2019 WHO study highlighted that anxiety and depression disorders cost the global economy $1 trillion each year in lost productivity. Workforces with lower incidences of mental stress are likely to be more productive, have higher levels of employee retention and report fewer days absence from the workplace due to sickness.

    In a positive development, the new data from ADP proposes improvements made in recent years to discuss and educate about mental health are taking hold. Indian workers are amongst the most likely in APAC to be open with their peers or managers on mental health issues in the workplace.

    The data shows India has made excellent progress in engaging in an open dialogue on mental health. Digging deeper and moving quickly to understand how India has achieved this, can facilitate replication in other markets, where progress in discussing mental health in the workplace remains slow and stagnant.

    zoha

    Work-life balance is often a strong indicator of mental health in the workplace. About 46 per cent of Indian workers are working 6-10 hours weekly, without being paid for the same. This kind of unpaid overtime can be very demotivating in the long run. Flexibility is the need of the hour.

    ADP report ADP study Always Designing for People high stress Indain works Overtime stress unpaid work weekly stress
    Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    HRK News Bureau

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Related Posts

    AI is making communication skills more valuable, not less

    June 10, 2026

    India’s wellness economy is booming. So is employee stress

    June 3, 2026

    Leaders are 12 percentage points more likely to feel angry at work than employees they manage

    May 27, 2026

    1,587% surge in AI-agent jobs. Only 32% of workers receive AI training

    May 13, 2026
    Editorial

    Why HR becomes conservative when hiring HR

    Hire for potential, not just pedigree. Look beyond industry boundaries. Avoid groupthink. Value transferable capability.…

    The knowledge that retires before the person does

    The logic behind retirement at 60 once made sense. India was younger. Jobs were scarce.…

    EDITOR'S PICKS

    The most unexpected source of motivation at work

    June 12, 2026

    Case-in-Point: Values vs performance

    June 11, 2026

    herSTORY: Preeti Ahuja, Global CPO, Husk Power

    June 11, 2026

    HR Perspectives by Himanshu Sinha: “Retention is not simply an HR initiative; it is an organisational responsibility”

    June 10, 2026
    Latest Post

    Hyatt surpasses youth hiring goal, employs over 12,000 through RiseHY initiative

    News June 12, 2026

    Hyatt Hotels Corporation has exceeded its global hiring target under its RiseHY workforce- development programme,…

    Public-sector banks add over 13,000 employees in FY26: Report

    News June 12, 2026

    Public-sector banks continued to expand their workforce in FY26, signalling that human capital remains central…

    Volkswagen targets 28,000 job cuts by 2030

    News June 12, 2026

    Volkswagen is moving ahead with its restructuring strategy in Germany, with thousands of jobs set…

    Microsoft restricts employee access to Anthropic’s AI Model over data concern

    News June 12, 2026

    Microsoft has reportedly blocked employee access to Anthropic’s newly launched AI model, Claude Fable 5.…

    Asia's No.1 HR Platform

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp Bluesky
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Career
    • Reach Us
    • Exclusive Features
    • Cover Story
    • Editorial
    • Dive into the Future of Work: Download HRForecast 2024 Now!
    © 2026 HRKatha.com
    • Disclaimer
    • Refunds & Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.