Thursday, 24 September 2020

Work is Going Hybrid and it Will Have Major Economic and Societal Impacts

CNBC's JPMorgan will have staff cycle between office and remote work in a move that may remake Wall Street covers a plan by the bank to institute a rotational work location model that includes in-person and remote work. 

Key quote:

“We are going to start implementing the model that I believe will be more or less permanent, which is this rotational model,” Pinto told CNBC in a Zoom call from London, where he is based. “Depending on the type of business, you may be working one week a month from home, or two days a week from home, or two weeks a month.”

JP Morgan isn't the only company planning on this.

According to a survey by the HR consulting firm Mercer, 73% of the firms surveyed plan to implement a hybrid work environment that includes both in-office and remote work.

And a Gartner study found that 82% of executives surveyed plan on allowing employees to work remotely at least some of the time

They are doing this, at least in part, because although most employees don't want to return to the office full-time, most want to return to the office at least some of the time.

Most companies also want employees to show up at the office some of the time.  They think it improves cultural, social cohesion, teamwork and innovation.  

So both employees and employers are saying they prefer the hybrid model.  

Axios also covers this topic in their article Remote Work Won't Kill Your Office.  Key quote:

The big picture: Since the onset of pandemic-induced telework, companies have oscillated between can't-wait-to-go-back and work-from-home-forever. Now, it's becoming increasingly clear that the future of work will land somewhere in the middle — a remote/in-person hybrid.

Surveys conducted in the six months since most people started working from home show that less than 10% of Americans actually want to work remotely all the time, according to a new Barclays analysis.

So it looks like the hybrid model is going to be the winner, at least over the next few years.  

If this happens, it will have major economic and societal impacts due to dislocations caused by changing commuter patterns and shifts in where people choose to live.

Urban centers will most likely be impacted the most due to the decreased number of workers commuting to city center offices. They will also likely see some residents leave.  

Suburbs will likely benefit due to existing suburbanites spending more time and money in their communities. 

Suburbs will also likely see an increase in new residents, due to people leaving the cities in search of lower costs and more space. But many of these workers will still need to be in commuting distance since a hybrid model means going to the office on a somewhat regular basis.

Smaller cities will also likely benefit because a large number of people will likely have enough flexibility to move even farther away from the office. 

The shift to remote work is getting a lot of attention, but we're still a long way from fully understanding the extensive impacts this shift will likely have.



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