The difficulties of policing remote work
Why bans on after-hours calls may not work
AS OFFICE LIFE approaches some sort of new normal, remote working is here to stay. Employers enjoy cost savings as they spend less on desks and floor space. For employees the promise is of time saved: spared of their commute, they can get their work done and focus on their families and hobbies. That, at least, is the idea. But, as many a remote employee knows, the boundary between work and home life can blur.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Only disconnect”
Finance & economics December 11th 2021
- Evidence for the “great resignation” is thin on the ground
- The difficulties of policing remote work
- In word and deed, China is easing economic policy
- Two key questions for the European Central Bank
- The economics of a new China-Laos train line
- America is seeing both fast growth and high inflation
- Why the dollar’s ascendancy won’t last
- Crypto lobbying is going ballistic
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