German, Manager

German Manager Loyalty Plummets as Quiet Quitting Moves Into the C-Suite

26.06.2026 - 12:50:15 | boerse-global.de

Gallup survey reveals only 12% of German managers feel strong emotional bond to their company, down from 27% in 2020. Constant change and lack of support drive disengagement even as labor market cools.

Quiet Quitting Reaches German Managers: Only 12% Feel Loyalty
German - German Manager Loyalty Plummets as Quiet Quitting Moves Into the C-Suite 26.06.2026 - Bild: über boerse-global.de

Three out of every ten managers in Germany are actively looking for a new employer — a dramatic sign that the phenomenon known as quiet quitting has spread to the country’s executive floors. A fresh Gallup Engagement Index reveals that only 12 percent of German managers now report a strong emotional bond to their company, down sharply from 27 percent in 2020.

“We are seeing a quiet rebellion in leadership circles,” says Heike Bruch, a professor at the University of St. Gallen who specializes in organizational behavior. Alongside leadership coach Violeta Nikolic, Bruch identifies constant organizational transformation as a core driver. Endless change processes, she argues, leave many managers feeling that their work has lost meaning.

Support from above is often missing as well. When top management fails to provide backup, expectations continue to climb while resources shrink. The resulting gap erodes identification with corporate goals. Bruch and Nikolic both view this emotional disengagement not as managerial failure, but as a rational response to circumstances.

The trend comes even as the broader labor market begins to cool. Germany’s ifo Employment Barometer fell in June 2026, signaling that companies are becoming more cautious about new hires. That may heighten pressure on the remaining leadership teams, who must now do more with fewer reinforcements.

Internationally, a parallel shift toward formalized managerial accountability is taking shape. Clear time budgets, measurable outcomes, and well-defined reporting obligations are being introduced to boost efficiency. For many German executives, that translates into even more coordination work and transparency requirements — adding to the erosion of loyalty that the Gallup data has captured.

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