新冠肺炎疫情下加拿大远程办公的流行情况

Murtaza Haider, A. Anwar
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引用次数: 7

摘要

目的本研究调查了加拿大在COVID-19之前和期间远程工作的决定因素。它探讨了工业部门采用远程办公的程度,以及大规模采用远程办公对城市旅行需求的长期影响,以及对市中心商业房地产需求的减少。设计/方法/方法本研究利用对商业机构的调查数据,采用数据可视化技术来说明在COVID-19封锁的早期阶段,远程办公的采用是如何演变的。该研究还使用加拿大劳动力调查的子样本估计了Logit模型,以探索大流行之前和期间远程工作的决定因素。研究发现,远程办公的采用在2020年3月和4月达到顶峰,当时加拿大近40%的员工都在远程办公。在疫情爆发前,只有12%的员工报告远程办公。在广泛使用信息和通信技术(ict)的公司中,远程办公的采用更为明显。在受过大学教育(知识经济)的员工中,远程办公似乎更为常见。实际影响知识经济和受过高等教育的工人在大流行期间转向远程工作的比例高于受教育程度较低的工人,他们更多地受雇于位于城市核心或市中心的办公室。乘坐公共交通工具前往城市核心的通勤人数急剧下降,市中心办公大楼的入住率创历史新低,这表明,即使远程办公的普及率远低于2020年3月和4月的水平,持有大量商业房地产投资组合的房东必须准备好应对商业房地产需求的下降。当未来几年商业租约需要续签时,这一点尤为重要。此外,政府在交通和运输基础设施上花费数千亿美元,努力解决交通拥堵问题,可能希望推广远程办公,作为减少旅行需求和昂贵的基础设施支出的一种手段。网络办公在一定程度上削弱了工作和家庭之间的界限,使数百万人能够在在家工作时继续保持高效率。然而,远程办公需要新的规范和规则来维持工作与生活的平衡。这种变化需要工人和雇主合作。原创性/价值据作者所知,这是第一项探讨加拿大COVID-19期间远程办公采用程度和远程办公采用决定因素的研究,使用加拿大范围内的代表性数据展示了员工和公司层面的观点。
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The prevalence of telework under Covid-19 in Canada
PurposeThis study investigates the determinants of teleworking before and during COVID-19 in Canada. It explores the extent of telework adoption across industrial sectors, as well as the long-term impacts of large-scale adoption of teleworking on urban travel demand and the dwindling demand for commercial real estate in downtowns.Design/methodology/approachUsing data from a survey of business establishments, this study employs data visualization techniques to illustrate how telework adoption evolved during the early stages of the COVID-19 lockdown. The study also estimates Logit models to explore the determinants of telework before and during the pandemic using a subsample from the Canadian labor force survey.FindingsThe study found that telework adoption reached a peak in March and April of 2020 when almost 40% of the workers in Canada were teleworking. Only 12% of employees reported teleworking before the pandemic. The adoption of teleworking was far more pronounced amongst firms that use information and communication technologies (ICTs) extensively. Teleworking appears to be far more frequent among university-educated (knowledge economy) workers.Practical implicationsKnowledge economy and highly educated workers, who switched to teleworking during the pandemic at higher rates than workers with less education, are more frequently employed in offices located in the urban core or downtowns. The drastic decline in commuting to the urban core via public transit and record low occupancy levels in downtown office towers suggests that, even if telework prevailed at levels much lower than those observed during March and April of 2020, landlords holding large portfolios of commercial real estate must prepare to cope with the lower demand for commercial real estate. This is especially significant when commercial leases come up for renewal in the next few years. In addition, governments struggling to address traffic congestion by spending hundreds of billions of dollars on transport and transit infrastructure might want to promote teleworking as a means of reducing travel demands and costly infrastructure expenditures.Social implicationsTeleworking has partially eroded the boundaries between work and home by enabling millions to continue being productive while working from home. However, teleworking would require new norms and rules to maintain a work-life balance. This change requires workers and employers to cooperate.Originality/valueTo the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that explores the extent of telework adoption during COVID-19 in Canada and the determinants of telework adoption, presenting both employee and firm-level perspectives using Canada-wide representative data.
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