Organisations in the Transport industry spend more on employee absence than organisations in any other sector, according to data from wellbeing and performance experts
An organisation1 of 1,000 employees in the Transport industry spends an average of £2.62 million per year on employee absence. Employers in the Education and Oil & Gas sectors follow closely behind, spending £1.98 million2 per year for an organisation of the same size.
Taking an average across all sectors, the annual cost of absence for a 1,000-employee organisation is £1.75 million. Organisations in Transport, Education, Oil and Gas, Healthcare, and Retail sectors all spend above average on their employee absence costs. Conversely, organisations in the Government, Construction & Civil Engineering, Utilities, Manufacturing, and Hospitality sectors all spend below the UK average.
Table 1 – Total Annual Impact of Absence for an organisation of 1,000 employees by sector* (Unadjusted)
Sector |
Total annual impact of absence per organisation |
Value of lost productivity |
Transport |
£2.62 million |
£1,583,523 |
Education |
£1.98 million |
£1,194,486 |
Oil & Gas |
£1.98 million |
£1,198,626 |
Healthcare |
£1.87 million |
£1,129,697 |
Retail |
£1.83 million |
£1,101,130 |
Government |
£1.46 million |
£871,728 |
Construction & Civil Engineering |
£1.45 million |
£867,437 |
Utilities |
£1.45 million |
£891,653 |
Manufacturing |
£1.42 million |
£848,405 |
Hospitality |
£1.34 million |
£820,302 |
Table 2 – Total Annual Impact of Absence for an organisation of 1,000 employees by sector* (adjusted to include the average of 18.9% of unreported absences)
Sector |
Total annual impact of absence per organisation |
Value of lost productivity |
Transport |
£3.08 million |
£1,868,557 |
Education |
£2.33 million |
£1,409,493 |
Oil & Gas |
£2.34 million |
£1,414,379 |
Healthcare |
£2.21 million |
£1,333,042 |
Retail |
£2.16 million |
£1,299,334 |
Government |
£1.72 million |
£1,028,639 |
Construction & Civil Engineering |
£1.71 million |
£1,023,576 |
Utilities |
£1.75 million |
£1,052,151 |
Manufacturing |
£1.67 million |
£1,001,117 |
Hospitality |
£1.63 million |
£967,956 |
Alun Baker, CEO of GoodShape comments: “Absence, productivity, and effective wellbeing management are intrinsically linked, and the true financial cost of absence is not fully understood by most employers. It goes far beyond the direct costs of providing temporary cover and sick pay. In fact, most employers fail to record employee absences accurately, and on average, 18.9% of absences are missed. So, in today’s challenging economic environment, with the focus on improving productivity and driving sustainable business growth, addressing employee ill health and correctly capturing and addressing absence has never been more important. Without a ‘cost-benefit’ analysis though, it’s difficult for leaders to make the case for investment strategies to improve employee wellbeing and organisational performance.”