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Survey Credits Casual Workplace Dress Code with Improved Morale.(Originated from St. Petersburg Times, Fla.)

Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News, January, 1996 by Albright, Mark

NEW YORK--Jan. 18--Stodgy corporate opposition to casual dress in the workplace is disappearing faster than suit coats at a company picnic.

At least that's the conclusion of research conducted for Levi Strauss & Co., which has a huge stake in the trend, and the Society for Human Resource Management, a professional group of corporate personnel officers.

The study estimates that 90 percent of U.S. employers permit their workers to report for work dressed casually at least occasionally. That's up dramatically from 62 percent in 1992, the first time Levi's did this study.

And an overwhelming majority of personnel directors now say allowing casual dress improves morale, saves workers money and has become a recruiting incentive. Today, 45 percent of...

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