
Tuesday Jan 14, 2025
The Tech Currents Podcast S1E4 -- "Ctrl+Alt+Office" the return to office mandates
This Tech Currents podcast episode discusses the controversial topic of return-to-office mandates in the tech industry. The hosts interview a cybersecurity expert who offers nuanced perspectives on productivity, considering factors beyond simple output metrics. They explore various contributing elements, including the economic impact on cities and the unintended consequences of widespread remote work. The discussion also touches on the role of company culture and the challenges of adapting to changing work models. Ultimately, the podcast concludes that a lack of comprehensive data currently hinders definitive conclusions on optimal work arrangements.
#productivity #innovation #RTO #returntooffice #workingathome
Here is a list of sources that were used in researching this episode with links where available:
•Aksoy, Cevat Giray, Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Mathias Dolls & Pablo Zarate. 2022. Working From Home Around the World. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 30446.
•Althoff, Lukas, et al. 2022. The Geography of Remote Work. 93 Reg.Sci. Urban Econ. 103770.
•Barrero, Maria, Nicholas Bloom & Steven J. Davis. 2021. Why Working From Home Will Stick. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 28731.
•Bloom, Nicholas, et al. 2015. Does Working from Home Work? Evidence from a Chinese Experiment. 130 Quart. J. Econ. 165–218.
•Bloom, Nicholas, Steven J. Davis & Yulia Zhestkova. 2021. COVID-19 Shifted Patent Applications Toward Technologies That Support Working from Home. 111 American Economics Association Papers and Proceedings 263–6.
•Choudhury, Prithwiraj, Cirrus Foroughi & Barbara Larson. 2021. Work-From-Anywhere: The Productivity Effects of Geographic Flexibility. 42 Strateg. Manage. J. 655–83.
•Deitrick, Sabina & Christopher Briem. 2021. The Pittsburgh Transition: Not Quite So Simple. 35 Econ. Devel. Quart. 197–201.
•Delventhal, Matthew J., Eunjee Kwon & Andrii Parkhomenko. 2022. How Do Cities Change When We Work From Home?. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 30281.
•Emanuel, Natalia & Emma Harrington. 2021. “Working” Remotely? Selection, Treatment, and the Market Provision of Remote Work (Harvard Dept. of Econ., Working Paper, April 2021). https://scholar.harvard.edu/eharrington/publications/working-remotely-selection-treatment-and-market-provision-remote-work
•Florida, Richard. 2021. The Shift from the “Last Relic of the Industrial Age” to Remote Work. https://www.detroitchamber.com/richard-florida-the-shift-from-the-last-relic-of-the-industrial-age-to-remote-work/
•Gibbs, Michael, Friederike Mengel & Christoph Siemroth. 2022. Work from Home & Productivity: Evidence from Personnel & Analytics Data on IT Professionals. IZA Discussion Paper No. 14336.https://ssrn.com/abstract=3846680
•Van Nieuwerburgh, Stijn. 2022. The Remote Work Revolution: Impact on Real Estate Values and Urban Environment. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 30662.
•Zhang, Ting, Dan Gerlowski & Zoltan Acs. 2022. Working From Home: Small Business Performance and the COVID-19 Pandemic. 58 Small Bus. Econ. 611–36.
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