The American worker is on a productivity tear and it may have more to do with a surge in working from home than the effects of AI, according to a Stanford economist.

For the past five years, the output for non-farm businesses has increased by a sizable 2% per year, The Economist reported citing statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This is a marked increase from the 1% productivity growth per year that defined most of the 2010s, and a trend that has taken even Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell by surprise.

Yet, while the hype around AI over the past several years makes it a logical candidate for the main driver behind the productivity boom, Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford economics professor who is known for explaining the Great Resignation of the early 2020s, says it’s more likely work-from-home policies since the pandemic are fueling the trend.

  • [object Object]@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    Imagine:

    • matching employees to jobs they are good at and enjoy, even if not physically nearby (a lot of good people have to take care of family, or have support networks they can’t/shouldn’t leave)
    • having a minimum of 30 more minutes a day back because you don’t have to commute
    • having a private quiet office to work in. Virtually no offices have private offices anymore.
    • having all your accessibility requirements met by default
    • being able to have healthier and cheaper lunches because you’ve got your full kitchen

    There are things I miss about the office for sure, but I like remote work a lot.

    • Bustedknuckles@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      But think about it from the business’s perspective!

      • lower rent

      • lower utilities

      • distributed IT

      • all employee work online/archivable by default

      • happier/healthier employees

      • access to global talent pool

      • easier to replace employees with LLMs!

      The rabid return to office push is what really convinced me that most businesses are not in the hands of people who are trying to Do their business the best. At minimum it’s extrovert CEOs, and feckless middle managers that didn’t want to adapt

      • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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        16 hours ago

        Their investors also have lots of money stuck in commercial real estate. And everyone knows golden egg geese are only good to bail out failed investments.

      • MasterBlaster@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        The lower rent point is one of the problems. Many of these businesses own the real estate or lease for many years at a time. If the space is 70% unused, that increases costs and looks bad.

        • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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          11 hours ago

          Turning out the lights would help, but how does an unused building increase costs? There is for sure minimum cost to maintain the building for sake or later use, but unless they’re giving remote employees stipends for home office space, it should still cost less than back to work.

          The big problem is still managers that want to feel important or intimidate underlings, and the same managers who have no clue how to measure productivity. Code line commit counts being a prime example.

    • youcantreadthis@quokk.au
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      16 hours ago

      But how will your owners exercise arbitrary control and surveillance of you? I’m sorry but you just can’t be productive like thay

      • scytale@piefed.zip
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        15 hours ago

        The wost part is they already have control and surveillance with all the endpoint management software installed on company devices.