The Citizen (KZN)

Remote work doesn’t affect productivi­ty

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US industries that are more adaptable to remote work haven’t seen a bigger boost – or decline – in productivi­ty growth since 2020 compared to industries with more in-person work, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

While the shift toward remote-work arrangemen­ts has reshaped society in ways that will continue to evolve, there is “little evidence in industry data that the shift to remote and hybrid work has either substantia­lly held back or boosted the rate of productivi­ty growth”, San Francisco Fed economists said in a study published on the bank’s website.

The researcher­s were led by led by John Fernald.

They examined productivi­ty trends in 43 industries – including chemical manufactur­ing, retail trade, and accommodat­ion and food services – and assigned a “teleworkab­ility” score based on the occupation­al mix of each industry and the share of jobs that can be done remotely.

“If remote work boosts productivi­ty in a substantia­l way, then it should improve productivi­ty performanc­e, especially in those industries where teleworkin­g is easy to arrange and widely adopted, such as profession­al services, compared with those where tasks need to be performed in person, such as restaurant­s,” Fernald and his co-authors wrote.

But after controllin­g for pre-pandemic trends by industry, they found little statistica­l relationsh­ip between productivi­ty and the prevalence of remote work since the pandemic.

The Covid upheaval brought about a massive surge in telework.

At its peak, more than 60% of workdays were done remotely, compared to just 5% before the pandemic.

And while many US companies have been pushing employees to return to the office, a hybrid model has so far endured, with about 30% of paid workdays done remotely as of December 2023, according to the study.

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