Remote work is the best thing to happen to families in decades
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Yet commentators and politicians keep missing it
Erik Hoel
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Art for
is by
Alexander Naughton
One of my more strident ācontroversialā opinions, and one you might not expect, is that I think the rise of remote work is an unalloyed good. In a world of Covid, rampant social media mobs, rising ideologies, increasing risk of nuclear war, AI threatening some sort of hockey-stick growth curve, and so on, the rise of working from home is a rare bright spot. In fact, in my ideal fantasy world, everyone would use video calls and high-tech virtual reality to work, and then, like, live on farms or beside lakes. Weād all commute only via horses and, ah, electric bikes. Etc. I may, self-admittedly, be an extreme case in that my preferred aesthetic could be described as āhigh-tech pastoral,ā but Iām definitely not alone in thinking that remote work is good.
The numbers are interesting. First, support for remote work, at least during Covid, leans democratic (68% āstrongly approveā vs 41% of republicans). And the "disapproveā numbers are even more stark (11% of republicans disapprove of working from home, and only 5% of democrats do). This may not seem like a big deal in terms of a difference, but it shows up in policies outside of Covid, e.g., like how the GOP has been, at times, openly hostile to remote work. In fact, this year House Republicans will likely introduce a bill that tries to curb remote work at the federal level as much as possible. I understand why theyāre doing itāGOP leaders think the federal government is pretty wasteful and want to curb that, and, like many of remote workās opponents, seem to believe remote work is less efficient.
But is it? This is the sort of thing which is incredibly hard to actually study. In the surveyed opinions of bosses, remote workers are less efficient. But the academic literature, in the rare cases where you can do things like randomize who works in-office vs. remote at a call center, shows a conflicted case.
Home working led to a 13% performance increase, of which 9% was from working more minutes per shift (fewer breaks and sick days) and 4% from more calls per minute (attributed to a quieter and more convenient working environment). Home workers also reported improved work satisfaction, and their attrition rate halved, but their promotion rate conditional on performance fell.
Regardless, if the effect were huge either way, Iād expect it to be a lot more obvious. Instead, where you end up on this question is essentially a Rorschach test for how you view work in general. Just speaking about the poles of opinions, there are essentially two views.
In the first view, the majority of time in the office is spent productively working, and home is naturally distracting. This is because human beings need structure, and without structure plus the social impetuses of work, they get very little done.
In the second view, perhaps best expressed by David Graeberās book Bullshit Jobs , most jobs are like somewhere between 20% to 80% bullshit. Perhaps the clearest expression of this second view involves the recent controversy over tech workers posting āday in the lifeā TikToks, the viral ones of which have a tendency to look a little more like, well, adult day care, than actual work. A lot of people on Twitter are connecting these sort of videos to the current tech layoffs:
GURGAVIN @gurgavin THIS IS WHY GOOGLE IS FIRING 10,000 + EMPLOYEES $GOOGL $GOOG https://t.co/kP4gBdsRWv
12:43 AM ā Jan 23, 2023 24,790 Likes 3,279 Retweets
Whatever you think of the reality, such videos feed into the Graeber-esque view. If youāre looking at this from the outside, it can indeed look like if someone happens to be elite enough (have gone to the right colleges, etc), society sort of supports them automatically, and it is inevitable theyāll be whisked away into the womb of some Big Tech company and given a cushy salary while mostly eating free fruit cups and drinking free coffees and, when not in a litany of meetings, theyāll occasionally make a PowerPoint.
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Of course, some peopleās concerns with remote work have nothing to do with efficiency, nor the nature of work itself, good or bad, adult day-care or well-deserved, but rather a more general concern over social cohesion; that if the 2000s were about ā bowling alone ā then the 2020s are about āworking alone.ā Hereās Freddie deBoer in a recent essay expressing this concern over remote work:
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Iām on record as fearing a future where nobody ever sees each other - where there are no interactions between strangers. . . Even when we go places physically, we minimize interaction. . . And, of course, thereās remote work, where you only see some of your colleagues over Zoom, and many of your coworkers never at all. . . Now, I think this is all concerning: democracy requires that we think of other people than ourselves, including and especially people who we would never consciously choose to spend time with. . .
I understand the concern, but I think precisely the opposite: remote work is actually really good for social cohesion. Why? Because, despite the heavily politicized and fractious debate over working from home that both sides participate in, for the most part the actual main benefit of working from home is weirdly under-discussed by both its supporters and critics.
So Iāll say it: the primary benefit for remote work for a lot people, if not most of them eventually, is that it makes balancing career with family much easier. Like my sister, who works a high-powered job at Lego from an office in her house with her three kids a couple days a week, and commutes the other times. Does she work during the day when sheās home? Obviously. But if you have kids, you know that one of the biggest issues is just the lack of flexibility and adaptability. Sometimes you just need 15 minutes. Sometimes you need to make lunch. Sometimes you need to switch the laundry. Sometimes you just want to spend a couple minutes saying hi and playing. Sometimes you need to spend ten minutes settling a toddler down for a nap and then youāll have the next three hours free, but this could happen at 11:15 or 11:30 and you donāt know which. Sometimes you want to be there when they get back from school, just to ensure they settle in doing something productive or interesting, and a full-time office job plus a commute makes such little conveniences and acts of organization impossible.
Since this is the internet, Iāll now say the very obvious thing: there are many amazing families wherein no parent works remotely and both have full-time jobs. My point is merely that remote work, ceteris paribus, often makes it easier to balance the differing demands of having a family and a career. And that a lot of people, often especially moms, clear-headedly pursue remote work specifically for that reason. And having had many people tell me this was their reason, I find it hard to believe that making it easier to have a family is contributing to the atomization of society.
Despite being an obvious and primary benefit, there has been little discussion about the positive aspect of remote work for families on either side of the political aisle. This is strange to me, since families are normally used as a political football in America, and yet the importance of remote work for families has been passed over and debates about efficiency, elite surplus, and housing have been substituted in. In comparison, when considering remote workās effect on families it can be justified by the key pillars and frameworks of both political parties. Republicans concerned about absentee parents and the degree of childrearing by the state? Support remote work. Democrats concerned about the opposing demands placed on women to be both high-income workers and picture-perfect Instagram moms? Support remote work. It seems a rare case of an obvious societal win to me. (Disclosure: This was written at home.)
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To be fair I should note that social isolation is not Freddieās only concern, and that he also worries that remote workers are bearing an extra cost of having to, e.g., buy a more expensive house or rent a more expensive apartment just to have a home office, and this is a form of externalization wherein employees are forced to eat costs that should be covered by their companies. This, again, seems like a reasonable concern. But I think in practice this effect goes the other way. Since cost of living differs so much across the US, it is actually far cheaper to own an entire house out on, say, Cape Cod, than it is to rent a three-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn. A benefit in total cost much greater than, I imagine, the increase in price necessary to get a bit more space, like an extra bedroom for a home office. This could very well be true even factoring in the pay differential for remote vs. office (which people are happy to accept). However, I would agree that remote working is bad for cities, as long as by ābadā we mean āare now less attractive to live in.ā But if the city gets enervated, suburbia and rural spaces are revivified, and vice versa, so itās a wash in that regard.
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Yet commentators and politicians keep missing it. Erik Hoel. 179. 67. Share. Art for. is by. Alexander Naughton. One of my more strident ācontroversialā opinions, and one you might not expect, is that I think the rise of remote work is an unalloyed good. In a world of Covid, rampant social media mobs, rising ideologies, increasing risk of nuclear war, AI threatening some sort of hockey-stick growth curve, and so on, the rise of working from home is a rare bright spot. In fact, in my ideal fantasy world, everyone would use video calls and high-tech virtual reality to work, and then, like, live on farms or beside lakes. Weād all commute only via horses and, ah, electric bikes. Etc. I may, self-admittedly, be an extreme case in that my preferred aesthetic could be described as āhigh-tech pastoral,ā but Iām definitely not alone in thinking that remote work is good. The numbers are interesting. First, support for remote work, at least during Covid, leans democratic (68% āstrongly approveā vs 41% of republicans). And the "disapproveā numbers are even more stark (11% of republicans disapprove of working from home, and only 5% of democrats do). This may not seem like a big deal in terms of a difference, but it shows up in policies outside of Covid, e.g., like how the GOP has been, at times, openly hostile to remote work. In fact, this year House Republicans will likely introduce a bill that tries to curb remote work at the federal level as much as possible. I understand why theyāre doing itāGOP leaders think the federal government is pretty wasteful and want to curb that, and, like many of remote workās opponents, seem to believe remote work is less efficient. But is it? This is the sort of thing which is incredibly hard to actually study. In the surveyed opinions of bosses, remote workers are less efficient. But the academic literature, in the rare cases where you can do things like randomize who works in-office vs. remote at a call center, shows a conflicted case. Home working led to a 13% performance increase, of which 9% was from working more minutes per shift (fewer breaks and sick days) and 4% from more calls per minute (attributed to a quieter and more convenient working environment). Home workers also reported improved work satisfaction, and their attrition rate halved, but their promotion rate conditional on performance fell. Regardless, if the effect were huge either way, Iād expect it to be a lot more obvious. Instead, where you end up on this question is essentially a Rorschach test for how you view work in general. Just speaking about the poles of opinions, there are essentially two views. In the first view, the majority of time in the office is spent productively working, and home is naturally distracting. This is because human beings need structure, and without structure plus the social impetuses of work, they get very little done. In the second view, perhaps best expressed by David Graeberās book Bullshit Jobs , most jobs are like somewhere between 20% to 80% bullshit. Perhaps the clearest expression of this second view involves the recent controversy over tech workers posting āday in the lifeā TikToks, the viral ones of which have a tendency to look a little more like, well, adult day care, than actual work. A lot of people on Twitter are connecting these sort of videos to the current tech layoffs: GURGAVIN @gurgavin THIS IS WHY GOOGLE IS FIRING 10,000 + EMPLOYEES $GOOGL $GOOG https://t.co/kP4gBdsRWv. 12:43 AM ā Jan 23, 2023 24,790 Likes 3,279 Retweets. Whatever you think of the reality, such videos feed into the Graeber-esque view. If youāre looking at this from the outside, it can indeed look like if someone happens to be elite enough (have gone to the right colleges, etc), society sort of supports them automatically, and it is inevitable theyāll be whisked away into the womb of some Big Tech company and given a cushy salary while mostly eating free fruit cups and drinking free coffees and, when not in a litany of meetings, theyāll occasionally make a PowerPoint. Subscribe. Of course, some peopleās concerns with remote work have nothing to do with efficiency, nor the nature of work itself, good or bad, adult day-care or well-deserved, but rather a more general concern over social cohesion; that if the 2000s were about ā bowling alone ā then the 2020s are about āworking alone.ā Hereās Freddie deBoer in a recent essay expressing this concern over remote work: 1. Iām on record as fearing a future where nobody ever sees each other - where there are no interactions between strangers. . . Even when we go places physically, we minimize interaction. . . And, of course, thereās remote work, where you only see some of your colleagues over Zoom, and many of your coworkers never at all. . . Now, I think this is all concerning: democracy requires that we think of other people than ourselves, including and especially people who we would never consciously choose to spend time with. . . I understand the concern, but I think precisely the opposite: remote work is actually really good for social cohesion. Why? Because, despite the heavily politicized and fractious debate over working from home that both sides participate in, for the most part the actual main benefit of working from home is weirdly under-discussed by both its supporters and critics. So Iāll say it: the primary benefit for remote work for a lot people, if not most of them eventually, is that it makes balancing career with family much easier. Like my sister, who works a high-powered job at Lego from an office in her house with her three kids a couple days a week, and commutes the other times. Does she work during the day when sheās home? Obviously. But if you have kids, you know that one of the biggest issues is just the lack of flexibility and adaptability. Sometimes you just need 15 minutes. Sometimes you need to make lunch. Sometimes you need to switch the laundry. Sometimes you just want to spend a couple minutes saying hi and playing. Sometimes you need to spend ten minutes settling a toddler down for a nap and then youāll have the next three hours free, but this could happen at 11:15 or 11:30 and you donāt know which. Sometimes you want to be there when they get back from school, just to ensure they settle in doing something productive or interesting, and a full-time office job plus a commute makes such little conveniences and acts of organization impossible. Since this is the internet, Iāll now say the very obvious thing: there are many amazing families wherein no parent works remotely and both have full-time jobs. My point is merely that remote work, ceteris paribus, often makes it easier to balance the differing demands of having a family and a career. And that a lot of people, often especially moms, clear-headedly pursue remote work specifically for that reason. And having had many people tell me this was their reason, I find it hard to believe that making it easier to have a family is contributing to the atomization of society. Despite being an obvious and primary benefit, there has been little discussion about the positive aspect of remote work for families on either side of the political aisle. This is strange to me, since families are normally used as a political football in America, and yet the importance of remote work for families has been passed over and debates about efficiency, elite surplus, and housing have been substituted in. In comparison, when considering remote workās effect on families it can be justified by the key pillars and frameworks of both political parties. Republicans concerned about absentee parents and the degree of childrearing by the state? Support remote work. Democrats concerned about the opposing demands placed on women to be both high-income workers and picture-perfect Instagram moms? Support remote work. It seems a rare case of an obvious societal win to me. (Disclosure: This was written at home.) Subscribe. 1. To be fair I should note that social isolation is not Freddieās only concern, and that he also worries that remote workers are bearing an extra cost of having to, e.g., buy a more expensive house or rent a more expensive apartment just to have a home office, and this is a form of externalization wherein employees are forced to eat costs that should be covered by their companies. This, again, seems like a reasonable concern. But I think in practice this effect goes the other way. Since cost of living differs so much across the US, it is actually far cheaper to own an entire house out on, say, Cape Cod, than it is to rent a three-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn. A benefit in total cost much greater than, I imagine, the increase in price necessary to get a bit more space, like an extra bedroom for a home office. This could very well be true even factoring in the pay differential for remote vs. office (which people are happy to accept). However, I would agree that remote working is bad for cities, as long as by ābadā we mean āare now less attractive to live in.ā But if the city gets enervated, suburbia and rural spaces are revivified, and vice versa, so itās a wash in that regard. 179. 67. Share.