[Johannesburg, SA – 29 January 2026]: ManpowerGroup’s new 2026 Global Talent Barometer has identified a powerful shift in worker behaviour: the rise of ‘Job Hugging’. This global report reveals that employees are increasingly choosing safety over satisfaction, holding tightly to the security of their current job while quietly searching for something better.
According to the Global Talent Barometer, 64% of workers worldwide plan to stay in their current roles, yet 60% are actively job hunting. Nearly one‑third (31%) expect possible job loss in the near future, creating a climate of caution, stress, and silent disengagement.
Manpower South Africa says this behaviour is even more pronounced locally. “In South Africa, people are clinging to their jobs not out of loyalty, but out of necessity,” says Lyndy Van Den Barselaar, Managing Director of Manpower South Africa. “With unemployment above 32% and more than 8.4 million people struggling to find work, employees are understandably risk‑averse. They stay because they feel they cannot afford to leave, but that doesn’t mean they’re fulfilled, committed, or engaged.”
Why Job Hugging is Surging in South Africa
South Africa’s labour market creates the perfect conditions for Job Hugging:
In this environment, employees increasingly opt for security over satisfaction. Many remain in roles they have outgrown simply because the risk of unemployment feels greater than the discomfort of stagnation, a hallmark of Job Hugging behaviour.
Van Den Barselaar warns that this creates a dangerous illusion of stability. “Employers may see low turnover and assume people are happy. But Job Hugging is not loyalty, it’s survival. And survival mode is not where innovation, creativity, or leadership growth happens.”
How Job Hugging Affects Organisations
Job Hugging has a measurable impact on organisational performance:
How to Spot Job Hugging in Your Workforce
Manpower South Africa highlights several early indicators:
What Executive and Leadership Teams Can Do to Reduce Job Hugging
Van Den Barselaar says the solution is not to push people to move, but to create the psychological safety that makes movement feel possible.
“Skills confidence is now the new currency of retention,” says Van Den Barselaar. “When employees feel supported, developed, and safe to take risks, Job Hugging disappears, and genuine engagement returns.”
A Workforce on Pause and a Warning for Employers
Manpower South Africa says Job Hugging will remain a defining workforce trend into 2026. The real challenge for employers is not turnover. It’s stagnation, as workers remain in their roles but disengage emotionally. To stay competitive, organisations will need to create the conditions that give employees the confidence to grow, move, and contribute fully, rather than simply holding on out of fear.