That's because employees who don't use all of their paid time off are essentially working for free during the extra days, a new study says.
The study, paid for by the US
Travel Association and conducted by Oxford Economics, finds that
American workers lost a staggering $52.4 billion due to unused vacation
time in 2013.
That's an average of $504 per worker, all because people are worried what will happen if they take time off.
"Americans are taking the value
of their time for granted," Adam Sacks, founder and president of Oxford
Economics' Tourism Economics division, says in a statement.
The study says that Americans, known as some of the hardest workers in the western world, are taking even fewer vacation days now than they were in the past.
Using data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
and a survey of 1,303 American workers done by GfK Public Affairs and
Corporate Communications, Oxford Economics finds that US employees took
an average of 16 vacation days in 2013, down from an average of 20.3
days between 1976 and 2000.
Oxford Economics also included
this chart, which shows how Americans have started to take fewer
vacation days over the past 20 years (note that the bottom of this chart
is 14 vacation days and not zero):
The study found that if
workers were to go back to taking 20 vacation days a year, they would
add $284 billion to the US economy, including $118 billion in direct
travel spending and another $166 billion spent in other places like
restaurants and retail shops.
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