Parklaner81
Steve Hodge
I think you misunderstand my original point. No one is saying people won’t return to work; but the way plenty work has already changed. And there is plenty of emerging evidence (relatively empty city centres, businesses not renewing leases on office space) that models of business will change as a result of this pandemic. I know a number of people who already know that they will work from home from now on.
Bosses are not going to order productive home workforces back to the office to save Pret A Manger (despite the government’s increasing desperation) - not when they can save themselves thousands each year on the rental of office space.
Scara's touched on it above, but this is a massive, sweeping assumption that I strongly suspect will unravel over time.
Of course, it's being taken as read by the media that people, en masse, can work just as effectively from home, and that isn't really being challenged right now because it's what the situation demands - we're in an emergency and as temporary, emergency fixes go, it seems to be working ok to muddle us through. That said, my own experience over recent weeks has often been that I've had to re-dial several times to get through to certain of my business contacts who are 'working from home', in a way that simply wouldn't occur if they were in their offices...
As I said, on the whole it's working reasonably for the situation we face. That's a very long way from saying that it's just as efficient as office working on a permanent, ongoing basis.