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The percentage of US households with someone working remotely at least one day a week has dropped to less than 26%, down from 37% in early 2021. This decline in remote work is attributed to the increasing focus on artificial intelligence (AI) as the central theme in discussions about the future of work. Experts, including Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom, emphasize the need to support remote work and lay to rest the five-day-office-week movement. Currently, only seven states and Washington, DC, have a remote-work rate above 33%, compared to 31 states and DC during the peak of the pandemic. The shift towards AI in the future of work is evident as remote work takes a backseat.
Last week, someone was working from home (for even one day) in fewer than 26% of US households, down from 37% in 2021 Only 7 states have a remote work rate over 33% now, compared to 31 when the pandemic was at its height WFH warriors rn: https://t.co/m1d6Ft6QGq
Oh... Fewer than 26% of US households still have someone working remotely at least one day a week, down from 37% in early 2021. https://t.co/gBdrwEVXT5 via @thefuture
In Opinion "Remote work has been good for almost everyone involved," Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford economist, writes in a guest essay. "We should support this golden moment and lay the five-day-office-week movement to rest." https://t.co/VKh3rkiddT
Fewer than 26% of US households still have someone working remotely at least one day a week, down from 37% in early 2021. https://t.co/LLvgMfZ3Z2 Two factors: Office vs Factory or Outside work, and Major City vs anything else
Workers with in-person jobs spend about $51 a day that they wouldn't remotely, per USA Today.
Fewer than 26% of US households still have someone working remotely at least one day a week, a sharp decline from the early-2021 peak of 37%. Only seven states plus Washington, DC, have a remote-work rate above 33%, down from 31 states and DC mid-pandemic. https://t.co/jhc2G1yrRZ
Fewer than 26% of US households still have someone working remotely at least one day a week, down from 37% in early 2021. https://t.co/qRMtyJE5q4
In Opinion "Remote work has been good for almost everyone involved," Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford economist, writes in a guest essay. "We should support this golden moment and lay the five-day-office-week movement to rest." https://t.co/sBZH4CZSDr
Fewer than 26% of US households still have someone working remotely at least one day a week, down from 37% in early 2021. https://t.co/iuKQpY59eq
The central theme around future of work these days is AI, not remote work https://t.co/wXnp3DOb3V
The central theme around future of work these days is AI, not remote work https://t.co/sKEdtZFjST
In-office workers spend (a lot) more money than remote employees during the workday. Here's how much. https://t.co/cpttaZ0nXF
The central theme around future of work these days is AI, not remote work https://t.co/kLncl4Ht7r
The central theme around future of work these days is AI, not remote work https://t.co/MxO1WN8xF6