Sometimes it feels like the world is on fireāeven, if not especially, at work, according to a new report which found that a toxic ātriple threatā of pessimism, uncertainty, and disconnect in the workplace is reaching critical levels.Ā
That, in turn, is endangering employee well-being and undermining productivity, according to the just-released 2025 State of the Workforce Report from āworkplace resilience systemā MeQuilibrium.Ā
āPessimism in the workforce represents a greater threat than just complaining about oneās job around the water coolerāit directly undermines workplace productivity and mental health,ā said MeQ chief science officer Brad Smith in a news release. āWe found that employees with work-related pessimism experience an over 60% reduction in productivity and 128% greater risk of depression.ā
The report analyzes findings from 5,477 employees across various industries in order to provide actionable insights for building empathetic leadership, developing individual resilience skills, and leveraging āorganizational citizenship behaviors to protect both well-being and business outcomes in this challenging landscape.ā
The problem with pessimism, uncertainty, and disconnect
According to the findings, 67% of employees say they feel worse when thinking about the state of the country, 35% feel worse about their work situation, and 49% feel worse about their financesāwith a majority, 52%, expecting the state of our country to worsen. Meanwhile, 27% expect their finances to get worse, while 24% expect their work situation to decline.Ā
Add uncertainty to the mix, and it more than triples the rate at which employees have a pessimistic view of work.Ā
āThe rise in uncertainty-related stress impacts more than feelingsāitās costing companies: Individuals who report a high degree of uncertainty-related stress also exhibit much greater productivity impairment, indicating that uncertainty may be reducing output by as much as half,ā said Smith. āAdditionally, nearly one in three employees who experienced a high degree of uncertainty-related stress show a high degree of burnout.ā
Burnout, in turn, is part of the third problematic elementādisconnectāthat drains employeesā mental and emotional energy. Also a part of that is a sense of broken trust when companies or leaders fail to meet expectations, which leads to weakened working relationships. More than half of employees (55%) showed at least one symptom of disconnectāparticularly younger employees (18ā29), 62% of which say they are affected by disconnect. The most severely affected reported a 66% impairment in productivity.
āUncertainty-related stress isnāt going awayāitās the new normal in the workplace,ā said Smith. āWhatās alarming is how itās eroding employee confidence and dragging down performance and engagement without many even noticing.ā
Gen Z is the most pessimistic
In addition to being more disconnected, Gen Z appears to be most pessimistic, despite pessimism remaining consistent across most demographic groups. The current state of pessimism for that group is significantly higher than for others across all measured categories:
- 71% of Gen Zers expressed negative views about the countryās state compared to 59% of older employees.Ā
- 62% of Gen Z reported dissatisfaction with their financial situation, vs. 37% of older employees.
- 48% of Gen Zāvs. 22% of older workersāwas pessimistic about their work situation.
Interestingly, when it comes to whatās still to come, Gen Z has hope, demonstrating consistently lower levels of pessimism about what the future holds.Ā
How companies can turn this negativity around
The report calls out two ācritical protective factorsā that can fight back against the triple threat:
- Empathetic management: Managers who prioritize well-being for their team create top-down positive effectsāreducing the stress of uncertainty by 37% and disconnect rates from 78% to 40%, the analysis found.Ā
- Individual resilience: Among the most resilient employeesāparticularly those with the learnable skills of emotion control and realistic optimismāonly 6% show signs of extreme disconnect compared to 59% of the least resilient.Ā
Written by Beth Greenfield for Fortune as āThe ātriple threatā endangering worker well-being and undermining productivityāespecially for Gen Zā and republished with permission.

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