The travel industry wants you to take more time off -- and they’ve got the data to prove you should.
The U.S. Travel Association has been publishing research on Americans’ work and vacation habits, and apparently we suffer from a “work martyr complex” that leaves us needlessly chained to the office.
The latest data shows the typical worker who gets paid time off takes just 16 days of vacation per year, even though she’s entitled to about 21 days of leave. Some of those lost vacation days can be rolled into the following year, but some are lost permanently.
Those 16 days of annual getaway time represent a new low in the amount of vacation Americans take. Here's the trend since 1976:
The USTA calls those five foregone vacation days “America’s lost week” and says it costs the U.S. economy $284 billion per year. And if you happen to be one of those undervacationed workaholics, the travel association has important news for you: Spending extra time at the office won’t help your career.
“The work martyr complex thrives on face time and fear,” the group says, “and it’s not helping American workers get ahead.” Here’s the proof: People who sacrifice the most vacation time are 6.5% less likely to get a raise or bonus than people who take every day off they’re entitled to.
Can't afford it
It’s obviously in the travel industry’s financial interest to get workers to take more vacations so they spend more on airlines, hotels and souvenirs. But the main reason people are reluctant to take full advantage of their earned time off probably has nothing to do with a work martyr complex.
The biggest problems in the U.S. economy right now are stagnant incomes and lost wealth—the aftereffects of a ruinous housing bust and deep recession. Median household income has fallen since the recession began in 2007 and may not reach pre-recession levels for another five years. Meanwhile, the typical family has lost about 40% of its wealth since 2007.
The USTA asserts that lost vacation time amounts to $52.4 billion in forfeited benefits per year, or about $502 per employee. It characterizes that sum as a “voluntary pay cut,” with some media outlets making it sound as if taking more vacation days would actually put money in workers’ pockets.
That’s screwy logic. It might be true that average daily pay multiplied by the total number of unclaimed vacation days amounts to billions of dollars. But at the individual worker level, nobody gets paid to take a day off. If you use vacation time to travel, it actually costs you money. Plus, about one-fourth of all U.S. workers -- roughly 34 million people -- have jobs such as waiters, retail clerks, nannies and part-timers in many industries that come with no time off, which means they actually lose pay if they go on vacation. In fact, the United States stands alone among 21 wealthy countries as the only one in which employers aren't required to offer paid time off.