Houston Chronicle

Study: Work-from-home will lift productivi­ty

- By Enda Curran

The great work-from-home experiment occasioned by the pandemic has divided opinion in the corporate suite and sparked endless debates about whether employees work as effectivel­y from the kitchen table as they do from the office.

A new study finds that, in fact, remote work does indeed make us more productive.

The work-from-home boom will lift productivi­ty in the U.S. economy by 5 percent, mostly because of savings in commuting time, the study says. The findings suggest the rapid adoption of new technology amid the pandemic will offer lasting economic gains, helping to boost sluggish productivi­ty that has long weighed on global growth.

Not everyone is a fan of remote work. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon has called the new arrangemen­ts “an aberration” that the investment bank will “correct as quickly as possible,” arguing that it’s especially crucial for new recruits to absorb the Wall Street culture.

In contrast, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the ability to hire engineers far from his company’s main offices has opened up new pools of talent and that many employees will continue working remotely after the pandemic — at salaries more in line with their new locations.

The study polled more than 30,000 U.S. workers to gauge whether arrangemen­ts that began as a stopgap will endure once infections have subsided. The research found that 20 percent of full workdays will be from home after the pandemic, compared

with just 5 percent before — but far less than at the height of the crisis.

The findings come as companies around the world continue to announce work-from-home arrangemen­ts, shedding downtown office space. HSBC Holdings PLC announced that it was scrapping the executive floor of its London Canary Wharf headquarte­rs, turning top staff’s private offices into client meeting rooms and collaborat­ive spaces. Twitter Inc. has said its employees can continue working from home permanentl­y.

The experience has aggravated economic and racial fault lines in the U.S., given that many lower-paying jobs — in food preparatio­n and other essential industries — can’t be done remotely, potentiall­y placing those workers at greater risk of COVID-19 infection.

The benefits of working from home “will accrue disproport­ionately to the highly educated and well paid,” the study noted.

Remote work once might have been a career killer: A U.K. government study of the years before the pandemic found that people who worked from home were far less likely to be promoted. But COVID has reduced the stigma that comes with working from home, the study found.

A better-than-expected experience, technologi­cal innovation­s and investment­s, and lingering fears of crowds and contagion will bolster the new working arrangemen­ts, according to the research.

The paper was co-authored by Jose Maria Barrero of the Instituto Tecnológic­o Autónomo de México, Nicholas Bloom of Stanford University and Steven Davis of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and Hoover Institutio­n.

“Our data on employer plans and the relative productivi­ty of WFH imply a 5 percent productivi­ty boost in the post-pandemic economy due to re-optimized working arrangemen­ts,” according to the paper. “Only one-fifth of this productivi­ty gain will show up in convention­al productivi­ty measures, because they do not capture the time savings from less commuting.”

Other main findings include:

• Higher-income employees especially will enjoy large benefits from greater remote work.

• The shift to work from home will directly reduce spending in major city centers by at least 5 percent to 10 percent relative to before the pandemic.

“The shift to WFH will also have highly uneven geographic effects, diminishin­g the fortunes of cities like San Francisco with high rates of inward commuting,” the study found.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / Hearst Newspapers ?? Researcher­s found that 20 percent of full workdays will be from home after the pandemic, compared with just 5 percent before — but far less than at the height of the crisis.
Gabrielle Lurie / Hearst Newspapers Researcher­s found that 20 percent of full workdays will be from home after the pandemic, compared with just 5 percent before — but far less than at the height of the crisis.

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