10 Trillion. It’s a number buried in Gallup's 2026 State of the Global Workplace report that deserves a lot more attention than it's getting.
It's May, which in my state means one thing. Indy 500. Which is why when I saw the number 10 trillion, I decided to make it fun. The average cost of a base Corvette Stingray, with Corvettes being the pace car for the Indy 500, is $72,000. You could buy 138,888,888 Corvettes, one for each person in Mexico, with enough left over for New Zealand and the racing teams at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway per Google. Let that sink in for a minute.
Low employee engagement cost the world economy an estimated $10 trillion in lost productivity in 2025. That's roughly 9% of global GDP gone. Not from economic downturns, supply chain disruptions, or market volatility. From people who are physically present at work but mentally and psychologically somewhere else entirely.
For leaders who have long treated engagement as a culture initiative or an HR priority that they ignore unless it's brought up in meetings, this number reframes the conversation. Disengagement isn't a soft issue. It's a hard cost that shows up in your productivity numbers, your turnover rate, your error rates, and your bottom line, whether it appears on your P&L or not.
Employee disengagement is a measurable, quantifiable business performance problem, and most organizations are significantly underestimating what it's costing them. Gallup's 2026 data found that only 20% of employees globally were engaged at work in 2025, the lowest level since 2020 and the second consecutive year of decline. That means 80% of the global workforce is either going through the motions or actively working against the organization they belong to.
The gap between what an engaged workforce produces and what a disengaged one produces is not marginal. It’s the difference between winning and losing. The difference between organizations that grow and organizations that grind. The difference between finishing the race or not making it out of the pit. And it could be the difference between staying in business, or not, in a tough economy.
Ten trillion dollars is an abstraction until you start breaking it down. Gallup's research gives us the tools to do just that, and the picture that emerges at the organizational level is sobering.
Here's how disengagement actually costs money:
Gallup's research shows that engaged business units outperform disengaged ones by 23% in profitability and 14% in overall productivity. When the majority of your workforce isn't engaged, that gap compounds every single day.
Disengaged employees either leave or stay and coast. Either way, the organization pays. Replacing an employee typically costs between 50% and 200% of their annual salary, accounting for recruiting, onboarding, and lost productivity during the transition. Gallup also finds that turnover in low-engagement teams runs 18–43% higher, depending on the industry.
Disengaged employees make significantly more mistakes. This manifests as quality defects, customer complaints, and rework (all of which carry direct costs that rarely get attributed to engagement).
Gallup's research finds that highly engaged teams experience 81% lower absenteeism. Unscheduled absences carry real costs in lost output, coverage, and the stress placed on colleagues who pick up the slack.
Perhaps the most underestimated cost of all. Employees who show up but operate at reduced capacity are harder to spot than those who are absent, and research suggests they cost organizations more than absenteeism does.
None of these costs require a disengaged employee to actively sabotage anything. Disengagement is largely passive, seeing an issue and saying nothing or knowing extra work needs to be done but not caring, and that's precisely what makes it so expensive. It drains performance quietly and gradually until the cumulative damage becomes impossible to ignore.
Most leaders look at an organization where people are showing up, meetings are happening, and work is getting done and conclude that engagement must be fine.
It's the wrong read. Here's why:
An employee can be compliant and productive enough to avoid notice while operating significantly below their potential. That gap (between what they're delivering and what they could deliver) is exactly what the $10 trillion figure is capturing.
Gallup's data shows that managers account for approximately 70% of the variance in team-level engagement. Disengagement at scale is almost never about the employees.
Manager engagement has dropped nine points since 2022. When the people responsible for driving engagement are disengaged themselves, the problem doesn't stay contained; it cascades.
"Best-practice organizations recorded manager engagement of 79% (nearly four times the global average of 22%. The gap between those organizations and everyone else is not accidental.") Gallup, 2026.
Can we fix this? Yes, we can. The encouraging finding in all this research is that engagement is responsive; it shifts based on specific, measurable conditions. That means the costs of disengagement are not inevitable. They are addressable.
Here are the levers with the strongest evidence behind them:
Gallup found that active disengagement among managers is cut in half when they receive sustained development: ongoing coaching, clear expectations, and peer support. Given that managers drive 70% of team engagement variance, the return here is outsized. And don’t forget recognition. Managers who receive praise are more likely to praise their teams.
Engagement patterns form fast. New hires who experience strong pre-boarding and onboarding reach full productivity faster and show significantly stronger early engagement. Poor or disorganized onboarding almost always shows up later as turnover.
Org-wide engagement scores are too broad to act on. High-performing organizations measure at the team level, catching pockets of disengagement early before they spread or before top performers walk.
McKinsey research reinforces what Gallup has long found: employees connected to their organization's purpose are four times more engaged. Clear expectations, visible career paths, and consistent recognition move this needle reliably.
Isolated managers disengage faster. Those with access to a peer community (where they can share challenges and learn from leaders at their level) show stronger engagement and more consistent performance.
Can you calculate the ROI of investing in engagement?
Yes. Engaged business units outperform disengaged ones by 23% in profitability, 14% in productivity, and 18% in sales. They also experience 81% lower absenteeism and significantly lower turnover. Weighed against the cost of manager development, structured onboarding, and peer community investment, the ROI case is strong.
What's the difference between "not engaged" and "actively disengaged"?
"Not engaged" employees are psychologically detached, doing enough to get by but not investing discretionary effort. "Actively disengaged" employees are unhappy and express it in ways that undermine colleagues and the organization. Both are costly; the latter carries a higher price tag because of its ripple effect on the people around them.
How quickly can engagement improve?
Meaningfully within 6–12 months with sustained investment in manager development, onboarding, and measurement. Engagement isn't a quick fix, but organizations that start at the manager layer (where the leverage is highest) tend to move fastest.
The $10 trillion figure is not meant to be paralyzing. It's meant to be clarifying.
For years, engagement has been framed as a values question, something organizations pursue because they care about their people. That framing isn't wrong, but it has allowed leaders to treat culture investment as optional, deferrable, or secondary to "real" business priorities.
Gallup's 2026 data makes the case that this framing has always been incomplete. Engagement is a revenue issue. It is a productivity issue. It is a retention issue. And at the scale Gallup is now measuring, it is an economic issue.
The organizations winning on culture right now didn't get there by accident. They built intentional systems around manager development, early engagement, and team-level measurement (and they tracked the outcomes the same way they track any other business investment). They build culture to work as a team, remain competitive, and hire and retain teammates who are in the race to win.
If you're not sure where your organization stands today, a useful first step is simply getting a clear picture of your current state. Up Your Culture's Quick Culture Assessment takes about two minutes and gives leaders a real snapshot of where their culture currently stands, including a score breakdown that identifies your strengths and your areas of opportunity. Understanding where you are is the prerequisite to understanding what it's costing you.
Sources: Gallup, State of the Global Workplace: 2026 Report.
https://www.gallup.com/workplace/349484/state-of-the-global-workplace.aspx