The Oakland Press

Survey: Side hustles are twice as common as jobs

- By Alex Tanzi Bloomberg

Side hustles are twice as prevalent as government data suggests, indicating that more Americans need to work multiple jobs to make ends meet amid historical­ly high inflation.

Nearly 10% of workers reported having a main job plus at least one other side gig, according to the latest work-from-home survey conducted by economists including Stanford University’s Nicholas Bloom. By contrast, the January employment report showed 8 million, or about 5% of U.S. workers, had multiple jobs, according to the Labor Department.

Despite a strong labor market underscore­d by historical­ly low unemployme­nt and solid wage gains - which, for some workers, are finally outpacing inflation - the cost of living is still a huge financial strain for many Americans. That’s leading them to load up on credit cards and tap into savings to make ends meet, and, in some cases, pick up another paycheck.

The Survey of Working Arrangemen­ts and Attitudes has collected more than 100,000 responses since May 2020. Bloom, along with researcher­s Jose Maria Barrero and Steven J. Davis, are the authors of the 2021 National Bureau of Economic Research working paper “Why working from home will stick.”

The survey also found:

• Days worked from home dropped to 27.2% in January, from a peak of 61.5% at the height of the pandemic. While the share has dipped slightly in recent months, Covid-19 is estimated to have permanentl­y increased WFH by the equivalent of almost 40 years of pre-pandemic growth.

• 13% of full-time employees are fully remote, 59% are full-time on-site, and 28% are in a hybrid arrangemen­t

• Employers are extending less flexibilit­y. Employees can now work from home 2.2 days per week on average, down from 2.3 days in the middle of last year.

 ?? STEFAN WERMUTH — BLOOMBERG ?? The Survey of Working Arrangemen­ts and Attitudes found that U.S. days worked from home dropped to 27.2% in January 2023, from a peak of 61.5% at the height of the pandemic.
STEFAN WERMUTH — BLOOMBERG The Survey of Working Arrangemen­ts and Attitudes found that U.S. days worked from home dropped to 27.2% in January 2023, from a peak of 61.5% at the height of the pandemic.

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