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Is the Great Resignation Really Over?

Ben Schein

SVP of Product

5 min. read
Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Earlier this summer, the New York Times declared the Great Resignation over. The tidal wave of employees voluntarily leaving their jobs had crested and crashed, apparently. Quitting rates had fallen back to prepandemic levels, the Times reported.  

The data reflects this decline, too. We plotted quits per month using the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Job Openings and Labor Turnover (JOLT) Survey. We can see the spike in quitting in April 2021, a 97.6% increase year over year. Since September 2021, quits have started to go down year over year. 

(We should note, though, that percent change in quitting was near an unusual all-time low in April 2020 during the global shutdown; this low point was rivaled only by the percent change in quitting from April 2008 to April 2009, when the Great Recession hit.)  

But then we took another look at the data. Although quit rates are down compared to last year, they still seem high based on historical standards. Look again at our graph above. At a glance, we can see the quitting values look higher on the far-right side of the graph than the left.  

Let’s consider resignation by geography. 

Continuing, with four years ago as the default comparison, how else can we examine and contextualize quit rates in June 2023? One interesting lens is geographic region. Both the South (+21.7%) and the Midwest (+9.4%) saw quitting increases in June 2023 compared to four years prior. On the other hand, the Northeast (-11.4%) and the West (-8.9%) saw decreases. So, it’s possible that the Great Resignation may be over in some parts of the country but not others.  

Lastly, let’s look at industries using the same four-year baseline. In transportation and non-durable manufacturing, quitting is up over 50% compared to June 2019. Other industries, such as construction (-15.2%), finance and insurance (-12.0%), and real estate (-11.6%), have fewer quits than four years ago.  

Look at a few service industries, just for fun. Healthcare (42.4%), education (42.9%), and transportation (51.9%) all have comparable percent changes in quitting, but the scale is enormously different. The BLS recorded over 1 million quits in both healthcare and education. Transportation logged about 378,000. This is a good reminder that percentages can be tricky sometimes. Smaller numbers can swing on a percentage basis even if the total impact is not huge.

Well, maybe. Our analysis suggests that the answer depends on where you live and what industry you’re in. And what baseline comparison you are using. We can say one thing for sure: You cannot always trust a metric until you really unpack what it is saying and understand the broader context.

Author

Ben Schein
SVP of Product

Ben Schein has over two decades of experience leading user adoption and implementing large-scale BI and analytics initiatives that deliver quantifiable business value. As an eight-year Domo user and content creator, Ben brings empathy, intellectual humility, and transparency to his role as SVP of Product, in which he oversees Domo’s Product Management and UX teams, as well as guides overall product roadmap for Domo. Ben also leads Domo’s Strategic Architecture Group (SAG), which advises on architectural patterns for complex implementations. He is a passionate advocate of sparking the fire of data curiosity and innovation for Domo customers across the globe.

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