KEY POINTS
  • The share of days worked from home ballooned in the Covid-19 pandemic's early days, and subsequently declined through 2022.
  • However, it has flatlined in 2023, suggesting more companies aren't calling employees back to the office.
  • Long-term technological and demographic trends suggest the prevalence of remote work may grow in 2025 and beyond.

The share of workers being called back to the office has flatlined, suggesting the pandemic-era phenomenon of widespread remote work has become a permanent fixture of the U.S. labor market, economists said.

"Return to the office is dead," Nick Bloom, an economics professor at Stanford University and expert on the work-from-home revolution, wrote this week.