A new report suggested that people around the world are working longer, on average, than they did before the pandemic. Researchers at Atlassian, a developer of workplace software, looked at the behaviour of users in 65 countries. They recorded the first and last times people interacted with the software on a weekday, and took this as a measure of their working day. They found that working hours started to lengthen in March, when most Western countries introduced lockdown measures. In April and May the average working day was 30 minutes longer than it had been in January and February (see chart). Most of the extra toil tended to be in the evening.
Workers in different countries put in different amounts of extra effort. Israelis extended their day by 47 minutes on average, longer than anywhere else. South Koreans, in contrast, clocked up only another seven minutes and the Japanese just 16 (although both countries were already among the world’s hardest workers). Only Brazil and China recorded shorter working hours during the pandemic than before it.
The researchers also detected a small shift in
how people spread their workloads over the day. By counting the number of users
online throughout the day, they found that people were doing a slightly smaller
proportion of work in the middle of the day and a greater share in the mornings
and evenings than they did before the pandemic. That may indicate that people
were taking advantage of the extra flexibility afforded by working from
home—but it also suggests that work was encroaching on what would have
previously been free time.
According to a survey by PwC, 44% of American bosses think that their employees have become more productive during the pandemic, but only 28% of workers agree. Yet they agree on one point: bosses and workers alike would like to keep working from home at least a day a week. It may or may not be less productive, but everyone wants a bit more flexibility.
Reference:
People are working
longer hours during the pandemic, The Economist, 24 Nov 2020
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