Remote working may have peaked in the UK as a loosening labor market hands power back to employers, according to research by LinkedIn.
In September, 12% of UK jobs advertised on the site were remote, compared with 16% in January, as “paranoid” employers worry about the productivity of working from home, said Josh Graff, the managing director of LinkedIn for EMEA and Latin America.
The company also found that three out of four bosses in the UK are concerned that the current economic slowdown means they will have to go back on flexible working, in a global survey of around 3,000 C-suite executives at large organizations.
The power is “shifting back to employers as hiring slows down,” Graff told Bloomberg Radio. “It's certainly a tight labor market, but it is starting to loosen, and economic uncertainty is beginning to threaten the pandemic progress that we saw over the last couple of years.”
Despite the falling percentage of remote and hybrid work being advertised, it is still popular with candidates, said Graff. He noted that although just 12% of jobs advertised were remote, they got 20% of all applications. Graff described this as a “growing disconnect between what professionals want and what employers are offering.”
Some companies are already curtailing flexible work for existing employees, with Bank of America Corp. telling its global markets employees that they can only work from home for two days a month.
Graff added that staff and bosses also disagree about the efficacy of working from home, with “paranoia” about the amount getting done. Microsoft Corp. research found that 80% of managers felt their teams were less productive when they were not in the office. About 85% of managers worry they can't tell if
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