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Americans Grow More Willing to Go Back to their Workplaces

As Covid-19 lockdowns endure, US workers are increasingly open to returning to their jobs, but they remain hesitant to resume social activities.

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Americans Grow More Willing to Go Back to their Workplaces
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As most Americans near the end of a second month of social-distancing policies and lockdowns to slow the spread of Covid-19, a growing number are itching to get back to work.

The most recent Bain/Dynata survey of US consumers, conducted from April 20 to April 22, finds that 41% of respondents are highly comfortable with returning to work, up from 29% the prior week, while only 23% are highly comfortable with resuming social activities such as dining out, which was on par with the previous week.

One notable finding of the survey: Men (51%) were nearly twice as willing to return to work as women (31%), an interesting data point as companies wrestle with difficult legal and ethical questions of which workers should return to work and the individual demographics of risk.

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Karen Harris is managing director of Bain & Company's Macro Trends Group, and she is based in the firm's New York office. 

Dynata provides first-party data for the Bain Consumer Health Index and provides a nationally representative sample of US adults (weekly) that constitutes the underlying data for this analysis.

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