A quick note: I am not an economist, a psychologist, or an organizational scientist. This is me reading Gallup’s data and thinking out loud about it. The figures here are estimates and population-level patterns, not a diagnosis of your job or your team, and Gallup’s own causal claims are its framing of correlational findings, not settled fact.
Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace is the closest thing we have to a global thermometer for how people feel about work, drawn from its World Poll across more than 140 countries. And the reading keeps coming back roughly the same.
Engagement hit a record high of 23% in 2022. Then it slipped. The 2025 report found engagement fell to 21% in 2024. And the 2026 report put it at 20%, the lowest level since 2020.
I find that ceiling more telling than any single year’s slide. When a number sits this stubbornly flat across a global sample for this long, it is probably not noise. It looks like the underlying shape of the problem, not an artefact of any single year.
More shocking still, Gallup’s 2026 report pegs current lost productivity from disengagement at roughly $10 trillion a year. The figure most often quoted in older coverage is $8.8 trillion, around 9% of global GDP, and it belongs to Gallup’s 2023 report, based on 2022 data.
One caveat: These are Gallup models, not accounting lines on anyone’s books, so treat them as estimates of scale rather than precise losses. Either way, the direction is the same. The cost of people quietly not caring about their work is enormous.
The part of the data I keep returning to is this: Gallup’s recent slide is not spread evenly. The 2025 report attributes the drop mainly to managers. Manager engagement fell from 30% to 27%, while individual contributors stayed flat. The 2026 report saw managers drop again, from 27% to 22%. And Gallup has long estimated that managers account for about 70% of the variance in team engagement.
Jim Harter, Gallup’s chief workplace scientist, frames the chain plainly. Harter argues that “Manager engagement affects team engagement, which affects productivity. Business performance — and ultimately GDP growth — is at risk if executive leaders do not address manager breakdown.” That is his causal reading of correlational findings, so hold it loosely. The pattern underneath it is hard to ignore, though.
I have been on the inside of this in a small way. Years ago I managed an adult language school in Vietnam, my first real management job, responsible for a sizeable team of around 35. What that experience taught me is that you cannot manufacture engagement with perks or a good pep talk. It comes from the work and the people. The manager who is themselves checked out, I think, cannot hand a team something they no longer have.
As Ryan Pendell writes “Engagement is not a characteristic of employees, but rather an experience created by organizations, managers and team members.” That is Gallup’s stance, and a contestable one, but it matches what I saw. The problem was rarely just the individual.
The flip side of a stuck number is the upside if it ever moved. Gallup estimates that if employees were fully engaged, the world could gain roughly $9.6 trillion in productivity. The organizations that hit those levels are not magic. Within best-practice organizations, 79% of managers were engaged in 2025, about quadruple the global average.
One number in my research for this post stuck with me more than the trillions. Only 44% of managers globally report ever receiving management training, and Gallup says basic training can cut active disengagement roughly in half. We promote people into perhaps the single most load-bearing role in this whole system and most of them never get shown how to do it.














