Tuesday, November 25, 2025

 Behind the Imbalance: Uncovering the Root Causes of Work-Life Strain in the Banking Sector



Finding a happy medium between work and personal life has been a contentious issue in the banking industry for quite some time. The reality for many employees is very different even while HR programs and policy guidelines may encourage a balance between work and home life. Why does this disconnect occur? As understanding grows why does imbalance continue?


Published in Sustainability the incisive study by Borgia, Di Virgilio, La Torre and Khan delves into the complex and developing factors that contribute to work life imbalance in the banking industry (Borgia et al., 2022). In order to uncover a more nuanced reality behind contemporary professional tiredness, their research delves deeply into the interaction between digital overload, distant work dynamics and knowledge risk going beyond a superficial examination of overwork.


Digital overload has been named as one of the main causes. Employees at financial institutions are becoming overwhelmed by the volume of information, alerts, emails and virtual meetings brought about by the widespread adoption of digital technologies. Digital tools have made workers constantly connected to their occupations unlike in the past when they could leave work at the office. The irony is that in an 
effort to make things more efficient technology has ironically promoted an always on society, making detachment and by extension, balance extremely difficult.

Borgia, Di Virgilio, La Torre & Khan (2022)



Stress associated with working remotely has been on the rise and it has only gotten worse during and after the COVID 19 outbreak. Flexibility, less commuting time and more autonomy are some of the advantages of remote employment but there are also significant disadvantages. When working from home many bank employees find it difficult to separate their personal and business lives. Working longer hours and under more stress is the result of not having a set workday and being expected to be approachable at all times. A home should be a place of relaxation but for some people it’s more like an extension of the workplace.

Knowledge risk is another important component that the study found. What this means is that a lack of effective knowledge exchange or management can lead to inefficiency, loss or ambiguity. Significant strain can build up in high stakes industries like banking due to the muddled communication, quick turnover or tyeh incomplete handovers. Workers have increased anxiety and negative work life outcomes as a result of having to scramble for the knowledge which often leads them to work the overtime or second guess their judgements.

When these three issues come together they form an unbreakable cycle. While digital tools do raise expectations they also make the responses faster. Although working remotely eliminates physical constraints such as an office it also eliminates the time constraints. Individuals not organizations bear the brunt of knowledge dangers which not only produce the informational black holes but also necessitate self driven problem solving.


It is crucial to note that these stressors have a multiplicative effect on people’s lives influencing their mental health, sleep, relationships with the family and friends and general health. Still, instead of getting to the root of the systemic imbalance most organizations just offer the band aid solutions like temporary leave policies or individual wellness webinars.

If the banking industry wants to make progress it needs to admit that these problems stem from the very fabric of its work structures and the communication practices. Better time management on the part of workers won’t fix the work life balance problem institutions need to rethink how they structure employment.


References

Borgia, M.S. et al. (2022) “Relationship between Work-Life Balance and Job Performance Moderated by Knowledge Risks: Are Bank Employees Ready?,” Sustainability, 14(9), p. 5416. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095416.

Chatrakul Na Ayudhya, U., Prouska, R. and Beauregard, T.A. (2019) “The Impact of Global Economic Crisis and Austerity on Quality of Working Life and Work‐Life Balance: A Capabilities Perspective,” European Management Review, 16(4), pp. 847–862. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/emre.12128.

Gregory, A., Milner, S. and Windebank, J. (2013) “Work‐life balance in times of economic crisis and austerity,” International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 33(9/10), pp. 528–541. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-05-2013-0061.

Khan, S. et al. (2022) “Impact of Work–Life Balance on Working Women in the Banking Sector,” Administrative Sciences, 13(1), p. 7. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci13010007.

Usman, M. et al. (2025) “WORK-LIFE BALANCE AND EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE: EVIDENCE FROM LISTED DEPOSIT MONEY BANK,” ARCN Journal [Preprint]. Available at: https://arcnjournals.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/204733628158438.pdf (Accessed: November 20, 2025).

 

11 comments:

  1. Very insightful explanation. You clearly show how digital overload, blurred boundaries in remote work, and unmanaged knowledge risks combine to create deep work–life strain in banking, damaging health and performance even when organizations claim to support balance. Highlighting that these are structural issues built into work design and communication practices not just “time management” problems strongly supports your call for banks to rethink how work is organized, not just add wellness webinars or leave policies.

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    1. Thank you so much for your thoughtful feedback. I’m really glad the core message came through — that work-life imbalance in banking isn’t caused by individual time-management issues, but by structural factors like digital overload, blurred remote-work boundaries, and unmanaged knowledge risks. You highlighted exactly why surface-level fixes like wellness sessions don’t address the real problem. I truly appreciate how deeply you engaged with the article — your comment adds strong value to the discussion.

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  2. This section clearly explains why work–life imbalance persists in the banking sector despite HR policies. It highlights how digital overload, remote work pressures, and poor knowledge management create a cycle of constant stress for employees. The analysis shows that the issue is structural, not individual. Overall, it provides a strong and insightful argument for redesigning work practices to support real balance.

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    1. Thank you so much for your thoughtful response. I’m really glad the core message came through — that work–life imbalance in banking continues not because employees lack discipline, but because digital overload, remote work pressure, and weak knowledge systems create a structural cycle of stress. Your comment perfectly highlights this and reinforces the need for deeper redesign of work practices rather than surface-level HR solutions. I truly appreciate you taking the time to engage with the article and add value to the discussion.

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  4. The articles provide a powerful, evidence-based argument that true organizational health requires structural and cultural alignment. The banking case study serves as a stark warning: policies on paper are meaningless if the culture rewards and reinforces the exact opposite behavior. Sustainable success depends on replacing outdated metrics and rigid leadership with supportive management and systems that genuinely value employee well-being as a strategic asset.

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    1. Thank you so much for this insightful comment! You’ve captured the core message of my article perfectly—real organizational health can only be achieved when structural systems and cultural behaviours move in the same direction. I completely agree that policies alone mean nothing if day-to-day practices contradict them.

      Your point about outdated metrics and rigid leadership is especially important. Unless banks shift toward supportive management and wellbeing-focused systems, meaningful and sustainable change will never happen. Seeing employee wellbeing as a strategic asset—not an obligation—is exactly the mindset transformation the industry needs.

      I truly appreciate your thoughtful engagement with the article. Your reflection adds real depth to the discussion!

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  5. Exposed in this article are the underlying drivers of work-life imbalance in banking. The points on digital overload, remote work stress, and knowledge risk really highlight how systemic issues-not just personal habits-shape the experiences of employees. It is clear that superficial solutions like wellness webinars or temporary leave policies are not enough. Meaningful progress will require rethinking work structures, communication practices, and organizational expectations to genuinely support balance and well-being.

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    1. Thank you so much for this thoughtful reflection! I’m really glad you highlighted the systemic nature of work–life imbalance in banking. You’re absolutely right—issues like digital overload, remote-work strain, and knowledge risk go far beyond individual habits, and they require deeper structural change.

      I completely agree that surface-level fixes such as wellness sessions or short-term leave cannot solve these challenges. Real progress depends on redesigning work processes, improving communication norms, and resetting expectations so employees can experience genuine balance and well-being.

      I truly appreciate you taking the time to engage so meaningfully with the ideas. Your comment adds great depth to the conversation

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  6. This article clearly indicate the problem of work life imbalance in the banking sector remains since it is not the habits of employees that cause the pressure and overload but the very nature of the core work structures. According to the research conducted by Borgia et al. (2022), digital overload, remote-work stress, and poor knowledge management have been united to ensure that employees remain constantly connected, work more hours, and face uncertainty. These aspects are mutually supporting and detrimental to health and achieving real balance is almost impossible. Superficial fixes are not sufficient; banks need to reconsider the structure of work and the channels of communication in case they are interested in actual and significant changes. Well written Ganushka

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    1. Thank you so much for this insightful comment! You’ve accurately captured one of the central arguments of the article—that the real cause of work-life imbalance in banking lies in structural issues, not individual habits. Your reference to Borgia et al. (2022) reinforces how digital overload, remote-work strain, and weak knowledge management combine to keep employees overconnected and overwhelmed.

      I completely agree that these interconnected pressures make true balance extremely difficult, and that superficial solutions cannot create meaningful change. As you said, banks must rethink work design and communication systems if they genuinely want to support employee wellbeing.

      I truly appreciate your thoughtful feedback and kind words. Thank you for engaging so deeply with the content

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