Many economists believe that increased work from home will last because it can raise the productivity of employees, thanks in part to fewer pointless meetings, less distraction and, most of all, a lack of commuting
Not having to commute was the equivalent of a big bonus for many employees this year — but, in the future, bosses may expect more hours in exchange for remote work, an economist says. Image: Danlin Zhang/The New York Times
Millions of Americans have gotten a taste of working from home during the pandemic, and, boy, have they liked it.
Almost two-thirds of U.S. workers in a McKinsey survey at the start of the year said they wanted to work from home at least three days a week when the pandemic was over.
But battles are coming. People tend to think the fights will be over whether employers will allow remote work in the future. But a more vexing struggle may be over whether employers take most or all of these newfound benefits for themselves — not by prohibiting remote work but by expecting more hours from employees once the labor market is not as favorable to workers as it is right now.
Yes, some employers will probably fight the remote work trend. David Solomon, Goldman Sachs CEO, called remote work an “aberration,” and the firm’s bankers returned to the office in June. Across town, James Gorman, Morgan Stanley CEO, announced that his company’s employees would return by September and said, “If you want to get paid New York rates, you work in New York.”
But more frequently, employers seem desperate to find workers and unlikely to want to anger them. The Labor Department reported that the number of open positions reached a record of 9.2 million in May. With offers of signing bonuses, higher wages and expanded benefits, many workers are in the driver’s seat right now. It is easy to see employers agreeing to these workers’ desires. Indeed, many commentators have declared that the United States is entering a “golden age” for remote work.
©2019 New York Times News Service