Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work

This report provides new projections, to 2026, of remote work rates and the accompanying macroeconomic implications for the EU27, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, Republic of North Macedonia, Turkey and the UK. Remote work covers a range of practices but few are straightforward to quantify consistently...

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Main Authors: Alexandri, Eva, Barbieri, Luca, Seymour, Daniel, Suta, Cornelia-Madalina, Thoung, Chris
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Brussels: European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10419/299869
id ftzbwkiel:oai:econstor.eu:10419/299869
record_format openpolar
spelling ftzbwkiel:oai:econstor.eu:10419/299869 2024-09-15T18:14:39+00:00 Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work Alexandri, Eva Barbieri, Luca Seymour, Daniel Suta, Cornelia-Madalina Thoung, Chris 2023 https://hdl.handle.net/10419/299869 eng eng Brussels: European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) Series: Report No. 2023.09 urn:isbn:978-2-87452-686-2 gbv-ppn:1870535340 https://hdl.handle.net/10419/299869 https://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen ddc:330 Telearbeit Wirkungsanalyse EU-Staaten Schweiz Island Nordmazedonien Türkei Großbritannien doc-type:report 2023 ftzbwkiel 2024-07-09T14:08:46Z This report provides new projections, to 2026, of remote work rates and the accompanying macroeconomic implications for the EU27, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, Republic of North Macedonia, Turkey and the UK. Remote work covers a range of practices but few are straightforward to quantify consistently. The definition of remote work used in this report is working from home (WFH), matching the Eurostat Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) definition. The literature review identified a range of drivers (e.g. sectoral composition of the economy) and potential outcomes (e.g. changes in expenditures on information and communications technologies (ICT)). Using a conceptual framework developed from the literature review, we modelled a baseline projection and three alternative scenarios: one that projected lower rates of WFH by 2026 compared to the baseline (Unwinding of WFH); and two that projected higher rates of WFH (Acceleration of WFH and Acceleration of WFH with contract changes). By 2026, the baseline projects that 18% of workers in the EU27, and 19.6% of workers in all 33 study countries, will be working from home. There is substantial variation in these rates by individual country, from a 2026 rate of 42% in Luxembourg to 1% in Bulgaria and Romania. Compared to the baseline, the Unwinding of WFH scenario projects nearly 350 000 fewer total workers and more than 10 million fewer WFH workers by 2026, with the reduction concentrated mostly in services. The Acceleration of WFH scenario projects more than 830 000 additional workers in total and more than 24 million more WFH workers by 2026, employed mostly in service sectors. The Acceleration of WFH with contract changes scenario projects nearly one million more total workers and more than 24 million more WFH workers by 2026. In this scenario, workers are assumed to shift from permanent to self-employed contract positions, leading to a projected increase in the rate of self-employment of 3.7 percentage points compared to the baseline. An unwinding of WFH in Europe would ... Report Iceland EconStor (German National Library of Economics, ZBW)
institution Open Polar
collection EconStor (German National Library of Economics, ZBW)
op_collection_id ftzbwkiel
language English
topic ddc:330
Telearbeit
Wirkungsanalyse
EU-Staaten
Schweiz
Island
Nordmazedonien
Türkei
Großbritannien
spellingShingle ddc:330
Telearbeit
Wirkungsanalyse
EU-Staaten
Schweiz
Island
Nordmazedonien
Türkei
Großbritannien
Alexandri, Eva
Barbieri, Luca
Seymour, Daniel
Suta, Cornelia-Madalina
Thoung, Chris
Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
topic_facet ddc:330
Telearbeit
Wirkungsanalyse
EU-Staaten
Schweiz
Island
Nordmazedonien
Türkei
Großbritannien
description This report provides new projections, to 2026, of remote work rates and the accompanying macroeconomic implications for the EU27, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, Republic of North Macedonia, Turkey and the UK. Remote work covers a range of practices but few are straightforward to quantify consistently. The definition of remote work used in this report is working from home (WFH), matching the Eurostat Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) definition. The literature review identified a range of drivers (e.g. sectoral composition of the economy) and potential outcomes (e.g. changes in expenditures on information and communications technologies (ICT)). Using a conceptual framework developed from the literature review, we modelled a baseline projection and three alternative scenarios: one that projected lower rates of WFH by 2026 compared to the baseline (Unwinding of WFH); and two that projected higher rates of WFH (Acceleration of WFH and Acceleration of WFH with contract changes). By 2026, the baseline projects that 18% of workers in the EU27, and 19.6% of workers in all 33 study countries, will be working from home. There is substantial variation in these rates by individual country, from a 2026 rate of 42% in Luxembourg to 1% in Bulgaria and Romania. Compared to the baseline, the Unwinding of WFH scenario projects nearly 350 000 fewer total workers and more than 10 million fewer WFH workers by 2026, with the reduction concentrated mostly in services. The Acceleration of WFH scenario projects more than 830 000 additional workers in total and more than 24 million more WFH workers by 2026, employed mostly in service sectors. The Acceleration of WFH with contract changes scenario projects nearly one million more total workers and more than 24 million more WFH workers by 2026. In this scenario, workers are assumed to shift from permanent to self-employed contract positions, leading to a projected increase in the rate of self-employment of 3.7 percentage points compared to the baseline. An unwinding of WFH in Europe would ...
format Report
author Alexandri, Eva
Barbieri, Luca
Seymour, Daniel
Suta, Cornelia-Madalina
Thoung, Chris
author_facet Alexandri, Eva
Barbieri, Luca
Seymour, Daniel
Suta, Cornelia-Madalina
Thoung, Chris
author_sort Alexandri, Eva
title Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
title_short Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
title_full Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
title_fullStr Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
title_full_unstemmed Short and medium-term sectoral employment: Forecasting the future development of remote work
title_sort short and medium-term sectoral employment: forecasting the future development of remote work
publisher Brussels: European Trade Union Institute (ETUI)
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10419/299869
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Series: Report
No. 2023.09
urn:isbn:978-2-87452-686-2
gbv-ppn:1870535340
https://hdl.handle.net/10419/299869
op_rights https://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen
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