If you spend enough time in a coffee shop in central London on a weekday morning, you’ll notice something. It’s the kind of place with exposed brick and expensive flat whites. The laptops never shut down. People don’t look up while they eat lunch. Calls carry over into subsequent calls. Everyone appears exhausted in a way that sleep is probably no longer able to alleviate. That’s not a London issue. The state of the economy as a whole is deteriorating.
The prevailing narrative presented by economists and governments for many years has been simple: wages rise, productivity increases, and people’s lives get better. It’s a neat story. It’s also getting harder and harder to believe. In many developed economies, labor productivity has continued to rise or at least hold steady, but the people who perform that labor report feeling more depressed, anxious, and burned out than any previous generation in history. Between the numbers and the individuals generating them, something has gone wrong.
| Topic Overview: The Burnout Economy | Details |
|---|---|
| Subject | Worker well-being vs. labour productivity in advanced economies |
| Key Report Referenced | The Burnout Economy: Poverty and Mental Health — UN Special Rapporteur Olivier De Schutter, 2024 |
| Global Mental Health Burden | 970 million people (11% of world population) affected by mental disorders |
| Productivity Loss from Burnout | Up to 50% reduction in employee output; driven by absenteeism and presenteeism |
| OECD Disability Claims (Mental Health) | One-third to one-half of new claims linked to mental health conditions |
| Youth Mental Health (OECD) | Over 70% of new disability claims among young adults tied to mental health |
| Government Mental Health Spending | Governments allocate an average of just 2.1% of health budgets to mental health |
| Successful Policy Examples | Iceland’s four-day work week; New Zealand’s 2019 Wellbeing Budget |
| Key Academic Source | Isham, Mair & Jackson (2021), Ecological Economics — “Worker Wellbeing and Productivity in Advanced Economies” |
| Workers Experiencing Burnout (US) | More than 59% of American workers report at least moderate burnout levels |
This contradiction was presented with unsettling clarity in a study by Amy Isham, Simon Mair, and Tim Jackson that was published in Ecological Economics. Their research looked at what is sometimes referred to as the “happy-productive worker thesis”—the notion that productivity and employee well-being are mutually beneficial. The fundamental idea is supported by actual experimental data: happier, healthier employees do tend to produce more. However, the researchers also found that productivity growth itself tends to undermine the very well-being that is supposed to drive it, something that receives far less attention in the boardroom. Pursuing productivity results in increased work hours, increased demands, accelerated goals, and digital tools that blur the boundaries between work and play, all of which have quantifiable costs.

The core of this is mental health. According to one analysis, workers in the UK who were found to be at risk of mental health issues lost about 13% more productivity than those who weren’t. This was the biggest effect seen across all workplace factors examined, surpassing even physical illness. A moment should be given to that figure. This indicates that anxiety and depression cost employers more than diabetes, heart disease, and caregiver fatigue. However, the structural response has been essentially nonexistent in the majority of countries. According to estimates from the World Health Organization, only 35% of nations have national initiatives aimed at promoting mental health among their workforce. It’s almost embarrassing, that number.
In particular, burnout has evolved from a catchphrase to something more akin to a public health classification. In 2019, the WHO officially acknowledged it as an occupational phenomenon. The data has only become more precise since then. Over 50% of American workers say they have at least moderate burnout. Mental health disorders now make up between one-third and half of all new disability claims in OECD countries; among adults under 35, this percentage rises to over 70%. These are not rounding mistakes. They stand for millions of people who have reached a certain point in their careers.
The fact that this crisis has been subtly created through gradual policy decisions and cultural norms rather than a single, significant decision is one of the reasons it is so challenging to resolve. The UN Special Rapporteur Olivier De Schutter’s 2024 report made a clear connection between the decline in mental health that is occurring within contemporary economies and their structure. His claim that the unrelenting emphasis on GDP growth has produced working conditions that are actually harmful for an increasing percentage of the workforce is unsettling to many in government. In many Western economies, there are fewer long-term contracts, more unstable gig arrangements, erratic hours, and wages that haven’t kept up with productivity gains since the 1980s. De Schutter made a particularly direct observation: in some situations, taking a precarious job may be more detrimental to mental health than unemployment. Putting that in a UN report is quite striking.
The relationship between productivity and well-being may have always been more precarious than conventional economics recognized. Since the 1970s, the mainstream of policy has mostly disregarded the Easterlin Paradox, which is the observation that rising average incomes in wealthy countries haven’t resulted in corresponding increases in life satisfaction. Seeing it reappear in the midst of a burnout epidemic feels more like a warning that was ignored decades ago than an academic curiosity.
Counterexamples exist that are worth clinging to. Iceland’s experiment with a four-day workweek demonstrated that cutting hours did not negatively impact output; in many instances, worker well-being significantly increased while productivity remained stable or even increased. The Wellbeing Budget in New Zealand was a sincere attempt to shift public policy away from purely financial goals and towards human outcomes. These are now proof of concept rather than radical experiments. The question is whether political systems that are based on quarterly economic indicators have the guts or the patience to take them seriously.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the economies that are most focused on increasing productivity also have the highest rates of employee burnout. It’s not a coincidence. That is a flaw in the design. Furthermore, the gap between increasing productivity and declining well-being will continue to widen—quietly, costly, and at great human cost—until those who set economic targets begin to measure what’s actually happening to the people meeting them.
