In London, a politician wrote not-so-subtle notes to remote workers last year, hoping to persuade them to spend more time in the office: “Sorry you were out when I visited,” Jacob Rees-Mogg, then a government minister, recalled writing in messages left on the desks of Cabinet Office staff members who were working from home.
When the coronavirus pandemic took hold in 2020, many industries across the world shifted to remote or hybrid work.
It was an immense experiment that yielded different results for different cities — with long-term standoffs between executives and workers in some cases, and a sweeping return to the office in others.
Whether a person is more likely to do work at a cubicle in a big office tower or on the living room couch now depends on where in the world those cubicles and couches are.
Many Asian countries have lower levels of remote work than countries in Europe and North America.
Persons:
” Jacob Rees, Mogg, Jem Kim, videoconference, Autónomo, México
Organizations:
Sequoia, Stanford, Instituto, Ifo Institute
Locations:
London, Seoul, San Mateo, Calif, Europe, North America, Britain, Canada, United States