Remote workers are about to get a rude awakening (2024)

Ever since hordes of Americans began fleeing big coastal cities during the pandemic, I've been wondering when — or if — they'd return. Sure, things are less expensive in the places they moved to, and the quality of life is often higher. But more and more, urban refugees have been pining for the things they left behind, from culinary excellence to cultural diversity. Every week it seems like I see a new story about some former San Franciscan or New Yorker regretting their decision to leave.

So recently, when the Census Bureau released its new estimates for domestic migration, I thought we were finally going to see a reversal of the big-city exodus. But I was wrong. From mid-2022 to mid-2023, the bleeding in many big metropolitan areas continued. New York lost 238,000 more people than it gained. The numbers read like casualty reports: 155,000 in Los Angeles, 54,000 in San Francisco, 25,000 in Seattle. Granted, the urban flight isn't as bad as the crisis-level hemorrhaging we saw in the first year of the pandemic. But every day, hundreds and hundreds of people continue to forsake America's greatest cities for smaller, more affordable destinations.

We've heard a lot about how the mass migration has been bad for major cities, sending them into a "doom loop" of empty offices and shuttered storefronts. But a new paper coauthored by Enrico Moretti, one of the best thinkers on the geography of jobs, highlights the dangers the migration poses for the very professionals who are ditching big cities. Moving away from a major city, Moretti found, can be terrible for your career.

Moretti, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley, followed workers whose companies shut down between 2010 and 2017. How people fared after that depended on where they lived. Those who lived in small labor markets were less likely to find a new job within a year than those in large labor markets. To get back on their feet professionally, those in small markets were more likely to be forced to relocate for employment. They were also more likely to settle for a role that was misaligned with their college degree, or in an entirely different industry.

"The big takeaway is that market size matters," Moretti says. "It's clear that larger markets improve the quality of the match."

That's precisely why workers and the companies that employ them tend to cluster in the same cities. Economists call it agglomeration. Let's say you're a coder specializing in AI. You're far more likely to find a job in San Francisco than you are pretty much anywhere else in the world, because there are a lot of AI-related companies there. And it's because AI specialists flock to San Francisco that AI businesses set up shop there in the first place. That's how cities become hubs for particular industries, like finance in New York and fashion in Paris. And that's why people put up with all the downsides of cities — because it increases their odds of growing their careers. Moretti's new paper confirms that when it comes to jobs, geography is destiny.

At first it seemed as though the pandemic had rewritten that rule. With the rise of remote work, professionals thought they could afford to leave their expensive cities without a risk to their careers. If you moved to Des Moines and wound up losing your job, you could just stay put and get another work-from-home gig. Your house might be in Iowa, but your job market was still back in California or New York.

But over the past year, more and more employers have stopped hiring for remote roles. The market for WFH jobs has cratered, putting everyone who moved away from big cities at risk. If they wind up getting laid off or they outgrow their current role, living in a smaller job market is going to severely limit their career options. As Moretti's paper shows, they'll either (1) wind up unemployed for a long stretch, (2) be forced to settle for a local job they're overqualified for, or (3) have to make an abrupt and costly move back to the big city they abandoned.

Moretti characterizes being in a large labor market as "insurance" against future shocks. Living in a big city isn't just about having a good job right now. It's what sets you up for success to land your next job — and the job after that. Those who moved away from big cities effectively gave up their career insurance.

And that's not all they gave up. When you live in an industry hub, you're surrounded by professional peers, making it easier for you to accumulate knowledge and skills. That's not just because you get to collaborate in person with your coworkers every day. In a big city, you also run into people who work for other companies in your industry — on the bus, at the bar, in line at the deli. Those serendipitous conversations not only expand your professional network, they also create what economists refer to as "knowledge spillovers," helping you learn new stuff that's relevant to your work. That's why innovation, as measured by patents, is higher in large markets, and why businesses in big cities tend to have higher productivity.

These upsides to living in a big hub are less obvious than the low rents and nice homes that have lured so many professionals to smaller cities. They also take time to manifest — you have to lose your job before you realize how hard it will be to find another. So professionals haven't come to grips yet with what they gave up by moving away. "The benefits of being a big city," Moretti tells me, "have been underappreciated" during the pandemic.

Advertisem*nt

Until recently, I was one of those underappreciators. In 2021, my remote job allowed me to move from San Francisco to Sacramento for my then-wife's job. We could suddenly afford a spacious two-bedroom in an apartment complex with a pool, and I loved the slower pace of life. Even after we split up, my initial plan was to stay in Sacramento. But as I started driving into San Francisco more often to meet with sources in the tech industry, I realized that being in the city was helping me come up with better story ideas. So a few months ago, I moved back to the Bay Area. Being here makes me better at my job. And if I should lose my job at some point, I know my search will go much better here, where there are more journalism jobs, than it would if I had stayed in Sacramento.

Of course, lots of professionals who left big cities during the early days of remote work will stay where they are, even if they lose their jobs. After all, one of the other trends spurred by the pandemic was the realization that career isn't everything. Plenty of people will be happy to settle for a lesser job if it means they don't have to sit in soul-crushing traffic and can have a big backyard for their kids.

But Moretti thinks the exodus from big cities is nearing an end. As the outward migration slows, he predicts, new people looking for career opportunities will flood into urban areas, more than making up for the people who left. The big hubs will resume agglomerating, just as they did in the decades leading up to the pandemic. Cities, in short, will be cities again.

"It's more a matter of when than if," Moretti says. "I never thought this was going to be a permanent change in the geography of labor."

Madison Hoff contributed reporting.

Aki Ito is a chief correspondent at Business Insider.

Remote workers are about to get a rude awakening (2024)

FAQs

Is remote work going away in 2024? ›

While 2024 might see little change in work-from-home levels, it will kickstart a revolution—one where working from home is 5x more common than 5 years ago in 2019.

Is remote work coming to an end? ›

The age of remote work might be coming to an end, experts say, and this could have a significant impact on both how American workers approach their careers and how companies look to hire. A new report from MyPerfectResume found 45 percent of workers predicted the number of remote job openings will drop in 2024.

Why are so many employers against remote work? ›

Challenges related to communications, coordination and self-motivation may be factors in the decline. And some employers have been warning that those who fail to meet new standards for being in the office may find adverse effects on their performance evaluations and incomes.

Are remote workers more likely to be fired? ›

A January survey from Live Data Technologies Inc. found that in 2023 fully remote white-collar workers were 35% more likely to get laid off than colleagues who put in at least some time in the office.

Is remote work bad for the economy? ›

The switch of workers plying their trade at home has had a significant effect on the real estate industry, driving apartment rents and house prices higher in some locales while at the same time pushing down rents and office occupancy rates in the major urban centers.

Why remote work is not working? ›

Research conducted by Stanford's Institute for Economic Policy and Research found that fully remote work is associated with about 10% lower productivity than fully in-person work. Factors cited include communication challenges, barriers to mentoring, building culture and issues around self-motivation.

What are the 5 C's hybrid workplace? ›

While this transition brings exciting opportunities, it also poses its fair share of challenges - what I call the "5C challenges": communication, coordination, connection, creativity, and culture.

Is hybrid work here to stay? ›

A successful hybrid model relies on meeting employees in the middle, creating an environment they want to work in, and the support they need to do their jobs. Whatever the hybrid model looks like to a company, the numbers show that it's here to stay. All data used was retrieved from an October 9th, 2023 Gallup Report.

Why are CEOs against remote work? ›

1. Inadequate communication and collaboration. Fully remote work means the traditional water-cooler discussions and impromptu desk huddles are gone, so leaders must find ways to replace those interactions.

Is the golden age of remote work over? ›

Whether it's finding a balance between remote and in-office work or redefining productivity in a digital age, the future of work is still being written. And while the “golden age” of remote work may seem like it's waning, its legacy will undoubtedly shape the workplace for years to come.

Which company is 100% remote? ›

X-Team is a 100% remote international company, originally founded in Melbourne, Australia. We help companies scale their development teams by providing them with extraordinary teams of developers from around the world.

Why is everyone so unhappy at work right now? ›

Despite wage increases, more paid time off, and greater control over where they work, employees are feeling angry, stressed, and disengaged, primarily credited to inflation and the unsettled nature of the workday.

Why is work from home ending? ›

"Business leaders want workers to spend some time in the office, and there are good reasons for it: in-person collaboration, cross-functional communication, professional development, sense of belonging," Brian Muse, the cofounder and CTO of Robin, told Insider in an email.

Why does the push to end remote work? ›

As the labor market lost steam, workers' ability to request to work remotely has weakened, and many firms are now pushing for a return to the office (RTO). We see this change in Chmura's RTI data. The rate of new job ads for remote positions peaked in the second quarter of 2022 and it has declined since.

What percentage of Americans work from home in 2024? ›

Here's a summary of the key facts and figures on remote work in the U.S.: According to the Pew Research Center, around 22 million employed adults (aged 18 and over) in the U.S. work from home all the time, equal to roughly 14% of all employed adults. Just over one-third of workers in the U.S.

What percentage of Americans will be working remotely by the year 2025? ›

Future Outlook:

By 2025, an estimated 32.6 million Americans (about 22% of the workforce) will be working remotely, reflecting a gradual shift toward remote work arrangements.

What is the forecast for remote work? ›

In the US today, about 12.7% of employees are fully remote, with 30% participating in some hybrid model. In ten years, some experts predict that those numbers will rise, to 30% and 60-65% respectively. Despite all of the benefits of remote work, in-person connections are still highly valuable.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Errol Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6221

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Errol Quitzon

Birthday: 1993-04-02

Address: 70604 Haley Lane, Port Weldonside, TN 99233-0942

Phone: +9665282866296

Job: Product Retail Agent

Hobby: Computer programming, Horseback riding, Hooping, Dance, Ice skating, Backpacking, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Errol Quitzon, I am a fair, cute, fancy, clean, attractive, sparkling, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.