44% of your employees want to leave. Do you know which ones?

Work Pulse 2026 uncovers 5 distinct Mauritian employee profiles — and why your average satisfaction score is hiding what matters most.

A labour market under structural pressure

Mauritius is simultaneously facing demographic decline, persistent brain drain, and a growing tension between the expectations of new generations and the realities of the workplace. This is not a temporary crisis — it is a fundamental shift in the relationship to work.

  • 29% of Mauritians are under 24 — down from 45% in 1995. The talent pool is shrinking fast.
  • 41% of employees are women, yet they hold only 31% of management positions.
  • 49% feel worried or very worried about their personal future.

Overall satisfaction: 6.6/10. So what?

The classic barometer gives you an average. It reassures you. It puts you to sleep. Because behind that 6.6/10 lie radically different profiles — some of whom have already checked out mentally, or are about to walk out the door.

“Averages mask critical profiles. An engaged employee at 8.6/10 and a distressed employee at 3.8/10 together produce a ‘decent satisfaction’ score. Departures, however, don’t come from the average — they come from the extremes.”

  • 44% want to change employer
  • 30% feel they are underpaid
  • 46% cite management-related problems

The Work Pulse attitudinal segmentation

The 5 profiles of Mauritian employees

Statistical analysis of survey responses identified 5 distinct groups — the result of a mathematical calculation that clusters individuals who share the most similar attitudes toward work. These profiles are not arbitrary. They are predictive.

The Fulfilled – 24%

IT/Telecom · 30–39 yrs · Middle management. Happy, well-managed, well-trained. Risk: boredom can push them out. 58% have a latent desire to go abroad.

The Anchored – 22%

Public sector + IT · 35–49 yrs · 97% don’t want to leave. The institutional backbone — but discreet and often overlooked. Moderate salary satisfaction (5.7/10).

The Suffering – 19%

Health & Education · 51% women · 20–34 yrs · Undervalued graduates. 75% want to leave. Lowest mental state (4.9/10). Requires immediate action.

The Mobiles – 18%

25–29 yrs · Highest education level. 95% are considering going abroad. The window to act is narrow — the tipping point can be sudden and irreversible.

The Trapped – 17%

57% men · 35–39 yrs. Stable façade (mental 7.6/10) but shattered management relationship (4.9/10). 85% want to leave. Undetectable by classic surveys.

Discover your Work Pulse profile

The Suffering (19%) and the Trapped (17%) together account for 36% of your workforce. Each departure costs 6 to 12 months’ salary. Yet they are invisible to any barometer that reads the average.

The 7 satisfaction levers – What actually keeps your employees

The Work Pulse 2026 study models the statistical drivers of workplace satisfaction. These 7 levers explain 67% of the observed variance — the most predictive factors of retention or attrition.

  • Pay — the #1 lever

    In the Mauritian context, pay equity is existential (inflation, family pressure). It cannot be bypassed.

  • Training — chronically underinvested

    A gap found in 51% of Mauritian companies. It’s the cheapest and most actionable lever available.

  • Management quality

    Average management satisfaction at 6.1/10 — the single biggest explanatory factor of attrition risk.

  • Alignment with company values

    When personal values align with company culture, employees work with more meaning and commitment.

  • Wellbeing & work-life balance

    Reasonable workload and flexibility (including remote work) are key retention levers in the Mauritian context.

  • Securing professional future

    In the age of AI, employees need a clear vision and personalised career support to stay engaged.

  • Respect among colleagues

    A disrespectful or toxic workplace climate is one of the primary drivers of disengagement and departure.

The real question isn’t whether you have Suffering or Trapped employees. You do.

The question is: how many, where, and how to act before it’s too late.

29 May 2026

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