ADP Study Reveals Over Half of Global Employees Struggling with Financial Stability
Chennai, India, 18th June, 2025: Despite global employment reaching a record high in 2024, more than half (57%) of workers worldwide are living paycheck to paycheck. Additionally, 23% of workers hold two or more jobs, primarily to cover necessary expenses, according to ADP Research’s People at Work 2025 report. The study, which surveyed nearly 38,000 workers across 34 markets, uncovers stark regional disparities and generational divides in the global workforce’s financial resilience.
Key Findings:
- Global strain: Taking on extra work doesn’t necessarily close the pay gap. More than half (54%) of single-job holders, 59% of workers with two jobs, and 61% of workers with three or more jobs are struggling to make ends meet.
- Regional hotspot: The country with the highest percentage of workers living paycheck to paycheck is Egypt (84%), followed by Saudi Arabia (79%) and the Philippines (78%). In contrast, South Korea has the lowest percentage, at just 18%. Regionally, the Middle-East Africa Region (70%) has the highest share, with 70% of workers living paycheck to paycheck, followed by Latin America (63%) and North America (58%).
- Age divide: Younger workers (<40 years old) are motivated to pursue extra jobs to gain work experience (40%) and nearly a third do it to fund their school or job training. In contrast, only 27% of older workers (>40 years old) do it to gain work experience, while 21% do it to fund their training.
Why workers take multiple jobs
The survey reveals that most workers holding multiple jobs are doing it to cover their necessary expenses, to save for future spending, and to build savings for retirement. The number of workers working more than one job is the highest in the Middle East Africa (34%), Latin America (24%), and Asia Pacific (24%).
While people have different reasons for taking on extra work, holding two or more jobs can be a necessity in parts of the world where average wages are low relative to a country’s cost of living. Informal economies in Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia exacerbate challenges, with workers who piece together gig or part-time roles lacking stability or protection.
Navigating the high cost of living
“Pay is the foundation of financial wellbeing for most workers, yet our data shows that even record employment isn’t translating into financial security. Nearly two-thirds of people who hold three jobs still struggle to make ends meet. This presents an opportunity for employers to take a more holistic approach to compensation to help workers navigate the higher living costs of today’s global economy,” ADP chief economist Nela Richardson said.