Survey: Remote Work Isn’t Going Away — and Executives Know It
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Hybrid work
by
Nicholas Bloom,
Jose Maria Barrero,
Steven Davis,
Brent Meyer,
and
Emil Mihaylov
by
Nicholas Bloom,
Jose Maria Barrero,
Steven Davis,
Brent Meyer,
and
Emil Mihaylov
ER Productions Limited/Getty Images
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Post
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Summary.
Many CEOs are publicly gearing up for yet another return-to-office push. Privately, though, executives expect remote work to keep on growing, according to a new survey. That makes sense: Employees like it, the technology is improving, and — at least for hybrid work — there seems to be no loss of productivity. Despite the headlines, executives expect both hybrid and fully remote work to keep increasing over the next five years.
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Remote work spiked during the pandemic, from about 6% of full workdays in the U.S. to more than 50% in the spring of 2020. Since then, it’s steadily decreased and since early 2023 has hovered around 28%. Many executives believe it’s time to come back to the office: Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, has declared himself a remote-work skeptic ; Mark Zuckerberg has declared that engineers “get more done” in the office; and Google’s chief people officer recently told employees that office attendance would factor into performance reviews. Even Zoom’s leadership wants employees back in person two days a week.
The only problem? Not even senior management expects this return-to-office push to work.
The Survey of Business Uncertainty is jointly run by the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, the University of Chicago, and Stanford. It surveys senior executives at roughly 500 U.S. businesses across industries and regions each month.
The most recent iteration of the survey, conducted in July 2023, asks:
“Looking forward to five years from now, what share of your firm’s full-time employees do you expect to be in each category [fully in person, hybrid, fully remote] in 2028?”
As the chart below illustrates, executives expect both fully remote and hybrid work to continue to grow.
See more HBR charts in Data & Visuals
They’re right to expect remote and hybrid work to increase, for four reasons.
First, as remote-working technology improves, the share of people working remotely increases. In the 1960s, offices were entirely paper-based, and working from home was very inconvenient. By the 1980s, personal computers began to become more widespread and remote work became easier. By the 2000s, the internet and nascent video calls made it easier still. The response followed basic economic logic: As the “costs” of remote work fell (lower inconvenience, for example), more people chose to do it. Work-from-home rates grew steadily over the half-century leading up to the pandemic, albeit from a very low starting point. And this trend will continue: The pandemic significantly increased the amount of research and patenting happening in technologies that support remote interactions.
Second, remote work will increase because startups born since the pandemic are more likely to use it . As these younger firms grow, the share of jobs offering remote work will increase.
Third, and perhaps least obvious, the U.S. is well positioned for remote work. Already, the U.S. has one of the highest rates of remote work of any country, behind only New Zealand and Canada among the 34 countries we surveyed . That makes sense. Remote work is a form of decentralization and personal autonomy: It gives employees more discretion over how and when they work. Management researchers have long known that for decentralized decision making to succeed, a company must be especially well managed . Separate research by our colleagues consistently finds that U.S. firms have better management practices , on average, than firms in other countries. Those better practices enable U.S. firms to more effectively manage remote work. It also helps that Americans have larger residences, which makes it easier to create a dedicated workspace at home.
Finally, remote work will increase because employees like it. The evidence suggests that working from home is valued by employees about the same as an 8% pay increase , on average. It’s a huge amenity and helps reduce turnover — in one recent, large study , by as much as 35%.
What about worries that remote work lowers productivity? Research suggests that fully remote work is up to 10% less productive than onsite work, on average. But it’s also much cheaper, because it cuts space needs and enables hiring from anywhere. Productivity in hybrid mode differs across jobs and people and with management practices. On average, however, hybrid work seems to have little net effect on productivity and may increase it. Hybrid arrangements also save on the costs — in time and money — of commuting. If employees accomplish the same amount of work whether they commute into the office two or five days a week, they’re actually spending their time more efficiently in the hybrid arrangement.
Companies and their leaders should seriously consider the merits of working from home, at least a couple of days a week. Managed hybrid, where teams all gather in the office the same day or two each week, may well be the best of both worlds. It can be profitable for companies, popular with employees, and better for the planet due to less energy consumption .
While the future extent of remote work remains uncertain, there’s little chance we will see a big return to the office. Remote technologies will only get better, and employees will gravitate to firms with more flexible policies. The biggest clue that the return-to-office push won’t work, though, is the fact that executives themselves privately predict that remote work will keep increasing.
Read more on Hybrid work or related topics Remote work and Work environments
Nicholas Bloom is a professor of economics at Stanford University.
JB Jose Maria Barrero is assistant professor of finance at Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico.
SD Steven Davis is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.
BM Brent Meyer is an assistant vice president and economist in the research department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
EM Emil Mihaylov is a Senior Economic Research Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
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Read more on Hybrid work or related topics Remote work and Work environments
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Navigation Menu. Subscribe. Sign In. Account Menu Account Menu Hi, Guest. Search Menu. Close menu. CLEAR. SUGGESTED TOPICS. Explore HBR. Latest. The Magazine. Ascend. Podcasts. Video. Store. Webinars. Newsletters. Popular Topics. Managing Yourself. Leadership. Strategy. Managing Teams. Gender. Innovation. Work-life Balance. All Topics. For Subscribers. The Big Idea. Data & Visuals. Reading Lists. Case Selections. HBR Learning. Subscribe. My Account. My Library. Topic Feeds. Orders. Account Settings. Email Preferences. Log Out. Sign In. Subscribe. Latest. Podcasts. Video. The Magazine. Ascend. Store. Webinars. Newsletters. All Topics. The Big Idea. Data & Visuals. Reading Lists. Case Selections. HBR Learning. My Library. Account Settings. Log Out. Sign In. Your Cart. Visit Our Store. My Library. Topic Feeds. Orders. Account Settings. Email Preferences. Log Out. Reading Lists. 1 free. s. last free article. Subscribe. Create an account. Hybrid work. by. Nicholas Bloom, Jose Maria Barrero, Steven Davis, Brent Meyer, and. Emil Mihaylov. by. Nicholas Bloom, Jose Maria Barrero, Steven Davis, Brent Meyer, and. Emil Mihaylov. ER Productions Limited/Getty Images. Tweet. Post. Share. Annotate. Save. Get PDF. Buy Copies. Print. Summary. Many CEOs are publicly gearing up for yet another return-to-office push. Privately, though, executives expect remote work to keep on growing, according to a new survey. That makes sense: Employees like it, the technology is improving, and — at least for hybrid work — there seems to be no loss of productivity. Despite the headlines, executives expect both hybrid and fully remote work to keep increasing over the next five years. Tweet. Post. Share. Annotate. Save. Get PDF. Buy Copies. Print. Leer en espanol. Ler em portugues. Remote work spiked during the pandemic, from about 6% of full workdays in the U.S. to more than 50% in the spring of 2020. Since then, it’s steadily decreased and since early 2023 has hovered around 28%. Many executives believe it’s time to come back to the office: Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, has declared himself a remote-work skeptic ; Mark Zuckerberg has declared that engineers “get more done” in the office; and Google’s chief people officer recently told employees that office attendance would factor into performance reviews. Even Zoom’s leadership wants employees back in person two days a week. The only problem? Not even senior management expects this return-to-office push to work. The Survey of Business Uncertainty is jointly run by the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, the University of Chicago, and Stanford. It surveys senior executives at roughly 500 U.S. businesses across industries and regions each month. The most recent iteration of the survey, conducted in July 2023, asks: “Looking forward to five years from now, what share of your firm’s full-time employees do you expect to be in each category [fully in person, hybrid, fully remote] in 2028?” As the chart below illustrates, executives expect both fully remote and hybrid work to continue to grow. See more HBR charts in Data & Visuals. They’re right to expect remote and hybrid work to increase, for four reasons. First, as remote-working technology improves, the share of people working remotely increases. In the 1960s, offices were entirely paper-based, and working from home was very inconvenient. By the 1980s, personal computers began to become more widespread and remote work became easier. By the 2000s, the internet and nascent video calls made it easier still. The response followed basic economic logic: As the “costs” of remote work fell (lower inconvenience, for example), more people chose to do it. Work-from-home rates grew steadily over the half-century leading up to the pandemic, albeit from a very low starting point. And this trend will continue: The pandemic significantly increased the amount of research and patenting happening in technologies that support remote interactions. Second, remote work will increase because startups born since the pandemic are more likely to use it . As these younger firms grow, the share of jobs offering remote work will increase. Third, and perhaps least obvious, the U.S. is well positioned for remote work. Already, the U.S. has one of the highest rates of remote work of any country, behind only New Zealand and Canada among the 34 countries we surveyed . That makes sense. Remote work is a form of decentralization and personal autonomy: It gives employees more discretion over how and when they work. Management researchers have long known that for decentralized decision making to succeed, a company must be especially well managed . Separate research by our colleagues consistently finds that U.S. firms have better management practices , on average, than firms in other countries. Those better practices enable U.S. firms to more effectively manage remote work. It also helps that Americans have larger residences, which makes it easier to create a dedicated workspace at home. Finally, remote work will increase because employees like it. The evidence suggests that working from home is valued by employees about the same as an 8% pay increase , on average. It’s a huge amenity and helps reduce turnover — in one recent, large study , by as much as 35%. What about worries that remote work lowers productivity? Research suggests that fully remote work is up to 10% less productive than onsite work, on average. But it’s also much cheaper, because it cuts space needs and enables hiring from anywhere. Productivity in hybrid mode differs across jobs and people and with management practices. On average, however, hybrid work seems to have little net effect on productivity and may increase it. Hybrid arrangements also save on the costs — in time and money — of commuting. If employees accomplish the same amount of work whether they commute into the office two or five days a week, they’re actually spending their time more efficiently in the hybrid arrangement. Companies and their leaders should seriously consider the merits of working from home, at least a couple of days a week. Managed hybrid, where teams all gather in the office the same day or two each week, may well be the best of both worlds. It can be profitable for companies, popular with employees, and better for the planet due to less energy consumption . While the future extent of remote work remains uncertain, there’s little chance we will see a big return to the office. Remote technologies will only get better, and employees will gravitate to firms with more flexible policies. The biggest clue that the return-to-office push won’t work, though, is the fact that executives themselves privately predict that remote work will keep increasing. Read more on Hybrid work or related topics Remote work and Work environments. Nicholas Bloom is a professor of economics at Stanford University. JB Jose Maria Barrero is assistant professor of finance at Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico. SD Steven Davis is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. BM Brent Meyer is an assistant vice president and economist in the research department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. EM Emil Mihaylov is a Senior Economic Research Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Tweet. Post. Share. Annotate. Save. Get PDF. Buy Copies. Print. Read more on Hybrid work or related topics Remote work and Work environments. Partner Center. Latest. Magazine. Ascend. Topics. Podcasts. Video. Store. The Big Idea. Data & Visuals. Case Selections. HBR Learning. Subscribe. Explore HBR. 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