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The next recession could boost working from home

Key Takeaways

  • Levels of working from home are settling down toward about 25 percent of fully paid days. By 2035, we can expect that to rise to 35 percent.
  • Technology and workplace culture will likely drive a growth.
  • Research shows a mix of hybrid and fully remote working can cut costs and perhaps increase productivity.
  • In recessions firms want to cut costs, suggesting a recession could induce a rise in remote working.

I often get asked by managers if working from home could be ended by the next recession.

The question comes from the premise that CEOs are itching to drag their employees back to the office five days a week. But they are afraid their employees will jump ship for another remote-friendly job. If a recession hits, the thinking goes, job opportunities will shrivel and managers will be able to force workers back to their office desks without the risk of attrition.

If that scenario seems correct, then sorry. Theory and data suggest the exact opposite. A recession will likely boost the WFH trend.

Let鈥檚 start with the theory. Research shows that working from home improves employee recruitment and retention rates, driving down overall labor costs. In one recent randomized control trial working from home reduced quit rates by 35 percent (Bloom, Han and Liang 2024).  In global surveys, employees report that hybrid arrangements with a few WFH days combined with in-office days is worth about as much as an 8 percent pay increase (Aksoy et al. 2022). Working from home also cuts office costs for firms, from lower rent, security, energy and support costs.

On the output side, research shows organized hybrid research has a zero to small positive impact on productivity. Fully remote working has more mixed impacts on productivity but can lead to more than offsetting cost reductions by enabling national or global talent sourcing (Barrero, Bloom and Davis 2023).

In short, a mix of hybrid and fully remote working can cut costs and perhaps increase productivity. In recessions firms want to cut costs at least as much as in booms, suggesting that if anything a recession could induce a rise in remote working.

On the empirical side the industry with the highest levels of working from home in 2024 was the information (tech) sector (Figure 1). Tech has had a tough 18 months, undergoing a drastic slowdown from 2022 onwards, with layoffs across many major firms.

Figure 1. WFH is highest in the information sector

Figure 1. WFH is highest in the information sector
Notes: Survey of Workplace Attitudes and Arrangements Sample  from January 2023 to June 2023

As a 乐鱼体育 professor I have seen first-hand the swing from boom to bust in technology hiring in Silicon Valley. Outside of the red-hot AI sector it is now extremely hard to get hired in tech, with software job postings down by two-thirds since 2022[1]. But tech is also leading the way in working from home, suggesting that business slowdowns do not lead to return-to-office mandates. Indeed, I interpret this data as supporting exactly the reverse. The industry facing perhaps the biggest slowdown over the last two years has the highest levels of working from home.

Turning to the longer run, what will  working from home look like a decade from now?

As Figure 2 shows, current U.S. levels of working from home are settling down towards about 25 percent of fully paid days. My prediction by 2035 is this will have risen to 35 percent. This is not a drastic change, but it is material. Two forces are driving my predictions for a longer-run growth of remote work.

Figure 2. WFH is stabilizing at about 27% of days

Figure 2. WFH is stabilizing at about 27% of days
Source: N=147,412 (SWAA) N=432,904 (HHP). SWAA data from survey responses weighted to match the US population. Pre-covid data from the American Time Use Survey. CHPS respondents weighted to match the US population aged 20 to 64 in households with incomes above $25,000.

Survey of Workplace Attitudes and Arrangements (Barrero, Bloom and Davis 2021)

The first is technology. Technology is everything when it comes to the ability to work from home. As one of four children of two working parents, I