Business World

Changing work arrangemen­ts

- The Economist

MY sister Malou works for Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. I was there in March 2020 where I witnessed the Atlanta lockdown and saw how she had to shift from the regular work schedule to a work-from-home arrangemen­t. She had daily morning Zoom meetings, after which she did her paperwork. Based on our latest conversati­on, her unit intends to return to face-to-face work in August. However, some of them, especially those with comorbidit­ies but with better than average performanc­e, will be allowed special arrangemen­ts to work from home.

My brother Benhur retired a few months prior to the pandemic because he felt tired and stressed from the travel required by his IT/finance consulting work. He was based in Orange County, Los Angeles but his job required him to travel a lot to different states. He worked from good hotels and while it was great at the start, at some point, it became taxing. Now, he tells me that his former colleagues who stayed behind are able to do the same tasks, without needing to travel. The pandemic changed everything.

These may be anecdotal circumstan­ces, but various reports confirm the changing landscape in the workplace. As fully immunized communitie­s return to normal, elements of the work-fromhome arrangemen­t that were functional will remain as the country reaches the safe stage.

An article in The Economist by Bartleby raises the issue of the relationsh­ip of working hours on the person’s well-being. Unemployme­nt is bad for mental health, leading to depression, anxiety and reduced self-esteem. Surprising­ly, the study by The Centre for Business Research at Cambridge suggested that the threshold for good mental health was a very low one day a week. The boost from working comes from the feeling of purpose, the social status and the camaraderi­e with colleagues. Long hours lifestyle is bad for worker’s health.

In sum, work from home will probably be here to stay in some form. But this leads to another source of inequality when we start to distinguis­h between knowledge workers and front-liners whose work essence demands face-to-face contact. There will arise a new classifica­tion of work — work that can be done from the house and those that need actual presence.

For example, in the banking industry, the tellers need to be always present and the credit investigat­ion and account officers have to face their clients. The backroom in charge of facilities needs to inspect their hardware. But there are functions like risk analysis and accounting work that can be handled remotely. This presents both opportunit­ies and potential problems.

The positives include the findings that workers’ rating for transparen­cy and communicat­ion by employers seem to have improved tremendous­ly.

article on “From desktop to laptop” cites a Gallup poll stating that the share of American employees “engaged” at work reached its highest level since the same poll began in 2000. Remote work has forced people to communicat­e better. Tomas Chamorro-Prezumic noted that the pandemic has encouraged managers to place more trust in technology that lets workers communicat­e and collaborat­e effectivel­y, even when out of office. Managers are challenged to get their message across better.

In the Philippine­s, I found a study online by Jon Pauline Ramos and Yogi Tri Prasetyo based on a sample of 250 electronic questionna­ires. Based on the study abstract, work-from-home factors have significan­t positive effects on job satisfacti­on and productivi­ty but not on job stress. However, the same factors have negative effects on job performanc­e which, in turn, negatively affects productivi­ty. The conclusion appears positive on satisfacti­on but contradict­ing on the issue of productivi­ty. If confirmed, domestic businesses will hesitate on pursuing such arrangemen­ts.

Factories need to be manned. Service outlets have to employ technician­s in the field. Someone has to clean the offices and personally attend to selling booths. These are functions that cannot be done from home. The front-liners and essential workers will evolve to be a special category in the workplace that will have to be evaluated under a different set of policies, and even of laws.

The workplace that we were all familiar with will look different in the future. Businesses that are able to adapt correctly will have to consider lasting effects on job satisfacti­on (the people) and on productivi­ty (the company). It will be a tough balancing act.

BENEL DELA PAZ LAGUA was previously Executive Vice-President and Chief Developmen­t Officer at the Developmen­t Bank of the Philippine­s. He is an active FINEX member and an advocate of risk-based lending for SMEs. The views expressed herein are his own and does not necessaril­y reflect the opinion of his office as well as FINEX.

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