Future of work: Back to the office
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[December 07, 2022] (Reuters)
- Employers have been asking workers with increasing urgency this year
to return to the office, while workers are demanding flexibility,
creating a tussle that is yet to be resolved as 2022 draws to a close.
Hybrid arrangements, where workers go into the office part of the week,
have gained broad acceptance as a compromise. But many workers are
holding out, even as some companies demand full-time return.
In New York City, for example, state government data shows subway use
increased in wealthier and business districts, especially since this
summer, indicating more white-collar workers were going to the office.
Still, it had only reached about 67% of pre-pandemic levels in October.
In recent months, subway use on the weekends has reached closer to
pre-pandemic levels than on weekdays. In London, separate data shows
tube journeys had reached just over 80% of pre-pandemic levels.
The evolving workplace is reshaping businesses that serve office
workers. Globally, office real estate is moving toward shorter leases
and flexible working setups, according to a JPMorgan Chase report in
September. In cities such as London and New York, companies are
downsizing but also moving up: demand for prime real estate has grown,
while older buildings are likely to suffer.
The landscape for other businesses that served office workers has
changed, too. In New York, while more new businesses have opened over
the past year than were lost during the pandemic, their geographical
distribution has changed, said Kathryn Wylde, chief executive of the
Partnership for New York City. Manhattan, where the bulk of offices are,
lost businesses, while boroughs like Queens and Brooklyn, where a lot of
people live, gained them.
WHY IT MATTERS?
Much is at stake over how the workplace evolves. It could determine
whether some people who left the workforce during the pandemic – such as
women who served as primary unpaid caregivers, older workers and those
suffering from long COVID – return. That, in turn, could impact labor
shortages afflicting many economies and sectors.
For employers, the model they choose would determine their
attractiveness to workers, especially the younger generations who demand
more flexibility and better work-life balance.
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Empty cubicles are seen as the first
phase of FMC Corporation employees return to work in the office in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., June 14, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah
Beier/File Photo
While companies could save on real estate, hybrid work could come
with other costs -- from worries about lost productivity and
collaboration to mentoring and the organization’s culture. In
regulated sectors such as finance, remote settings could also be
detrimental to compliance.
The nature of the workplace could also exacerbate inequalities that
were exposed by the pandemic: racial and ethnic minorities were
over-represented in frontline tasks where remote working was not
possible and faced a higher health risk. Not much has changed for
them.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR 2023?
White-collar workers are working hard. A Microsoft report in
September said the number of meetings per week had increased 153%
globally for the average Teams user since the start of the pandemic
– and 42% of workers multi-tasked during those meetings. Still, 85%
of the leaders it surveyed felt they did not have confidence
employees were being productive in a hybrid workplace.
The coming year could determine who ends up having the upper hand in
determining what work looks like in the future. A booming economy
and labor shortages have given workers more say; a recession might
take some of that away.
“It's not going to be so easy to give up your job,” Wylde said.
"That will probably mean that people are less resistant to the
requirement they are back in the office at least three days a week
-- which is where it feels like it is headed.”
Explore the Reuters' round-up of news stories that dominated the
year, and the outlook for 2023.
(Reporting by Paritosh Bansal and Mark John; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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