Comment by rurp

Comment by rurp 4 days ago

0 replies

It's almost certainly not b. There has been enough published research showing WFH to be somewhere between a significant productivity boost to a modest decrease that such data would be a significant outlier.

More likely the policy is being pushed for some combination of:

- Increased attrition

- Intangibles that management believes in

- Expected modest productivity gains they think are worth the downsides

- Reducing worker leverage