My take on this is although I live in an area that has not been hit as hard as places in the US or areas in Ontario etc, there is excess labour right now.
So, you get lots of people across North America looking for work, combined with cost saving exercises at work. Right now, the relative value of labour is low. What I mean by this ... is that (a) the cost of hiring People is lower (b) the easy of getting a "new" person is relatively easy for most jobs (c) we are back in the "you are lucky to have a job" mindset.
This reduced value of people, often brings out bad habits in the Management cadre of lots of operations. Managers, in a position like mine, allow themselves to use or permit to exists cultures that treat people relative to the "value" they have. Staff feel this ... just like when your sister-in-law snubs you, or that Hotel clerk doesn't smile. You feel in relation to how your are treated ... negative treatment yields negative emotions.
So, when the labour market has a shortage ... you adopt the "gold value behaviour set"; however, when you have a depressed value of labour then the "less than favourable" treatment prevails.
What I feel is that the War for Talent is just around the corner, and that Managers that create difficult cultures (or permit negative cultures to exists) will really face tough times when the future labour shortage comes.
I also think that in the current environment, many people are not "loving their Jobs". This stems from dissatisfaction, but also is negatively effected by world events, changes in the economy, the over-reporting of anything bad. This creates and fosters this negative feeling that exists in many (and yes, sometimes me). This spills over to how people treat their spouse, kids, dog etc ...
The reason that I created this thread was to explore how other felt in respect to their workplace. To get a sense, if I was perceiving things the same as others. From what I see many face a similar situation, so I see the course I am on is not that different than others .... I'm going to keep my rudder firm and sail onward!
Ted