Work tasks that can be done from home: Evidence on the variation within and across occupations and industries
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Publication Date
2020-05-12Journal Title
Labour Economics
ISSN
0927-5371
Publisher
Elsevier
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
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Adams-Prassl, A., Golin, M., Boneva, T., & Rauh, C. (2020). Work tasks that can be done from home: Evidence on the variation within and across occupations and industries. Labour Economics https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.57981
Abstract
Using large, geographically representative surveys from the US and UK, we document variation in the percentage of tasks workers can do from home. We highlight three dimensions of heterogeneity that have previously been neglected. First, the share of tasks that can be done from home varies considerably both across as well as within occupations and industries. The distribution of the share of tasks that can be done from home within occupations, industries, and occupation-industry pairs is systematic and remarkably consistent across countries and survey waves. Second, as the pandemic has progressed, the share of workers who can do all tasks from home has increased most in those occupations in which the pre-existing share was already high. Third, even within occupations and industries, we find that women and workers with less stable work arrangements can do fewer tasks from home. Using machine-learning methods, we extend our working-from-home measure to all disaggregated occupation-industry pairs.
Sponsorship
University of Oxford, the University of Zurich, the Cambridge INET, and the Cambridge Keynes Fund
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.57981
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330371
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