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Remote Work Productivity: How Flexibility Impacts Performance and Well-Being
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Remote Work Productivity: How Flexibility Impacts Performance and Well-Being

via Dev.toDaniel Wright

Forty percent of U.S. employees now work remotely at least one day a week, according to a 2023 study by Stanford’s Institute for Economic Policy Research [3]. That number alone shows how quickly the standard idea of "going to work" has changed. Managers who once worried about empty cubicles are now asking a harder question: can people stay both productive and healthy when the office is optional? The answer is messy. Remote performance is not a single line on a chart; it is a moving average that depends on task type, team habits, and how well a company replaces hallway chatter with deliberate communication. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics tracked sixty-one private-sector industries from 2019 to 2022 and found that total-factor productivity rose fastest in sectors where remote work expanded most [6]. Knowledge work - software, finance, professional services - led the gains. Yet the same Stanford paper that reported the 40 % figure also estimates that fully remote roles are, on averag

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