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Research finds 47 per cent of Australian employees shop online on the clock

ALMOST half of Australian workers do this every single week while on the job — and it’s costing us billions each and every year.

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NEW research has found Aussie workers are indulging in a guilty habit at an unprecedented rate.

The data, from comparison site finder.com.au, has revealed 47 per cent of us — or nine million Australians — are guilty of online shopping or browsing at work.

And this lost productivity adds up — apparently, the habit costs Australian businesses $603 million in wages every single week — or $31.3 billion annually.

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In 2017, the annual figure was $23.8 billion — so it seems our online shopping addiction is only getting more and more widespread.

In fact, the research found the average worker spent 108 minutes shopping online every week, with an extra 2.5 million people now owning up to the habit, compared with the previous year.

Female workers were slightly more likely to shop on the clock, with 36 per cent of women surveyed admitting to the practice, compared with 30 per cent of men.

Tasmania is the most productive state with 43 per cent of workers stating they don’t shop online while at work.

This compares to 36 per cent of Queenslanders and South Australians, 33 per cent of Victorians and 30 per cent of New South Welshmen and Western Australians.

This lost productivity is costing Aussie businesses $603 million in wages every single week. Picture: finder.com.au
This lost productivity is costing Aussie businesses $603 million in wages every single week. Picture: finder.com.au

And more than one-third of us spend up to two hours shopping online every week.

Finder.com.au money expert Bessie Hassan said the findings weren’t surprising.

“Most Aussies spend majority of their day in front of a computer,” she explained.

“When boredom strikes, or if you’ve hit a wall, it’s easy to deviate from your day-to-day work and stumble on to an online shopping site.

“If you’re receiving sales emails from your favourite online retailer it can be tempting to click off on to the website and get lost down the rabbit hole that is online shopping.”

But Ms Hassan warned that when the hours were added up, productivity could be hindered.

“Perhaps the reason so many Aussies are adopting this bad browsing habit is because work and home life are becoming more and more entwined,” she said.

“Everyone’s guilty of checking their work emails at home, so it doesn’t feel out of place to jump online and look for new winter boots while at work.

“If you don’t think you can resist the pull of an online sale, try to refrain from checking your personal emails at work. That way you’ll avoid the email newsletter discounts and won’t be tempted.”

alexis.carey@news.com.au

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/work/at-work/research-finds-47-per-cent-of-australian-employees-shop-online-on-the-clock/news-story/dddeddd39ed9845bcf2e658c3d7d8237