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Implications of Remote Working Adoption on Place Based Policies

A Focus on G7 Countries

image of Implications of Remote Working Adoption on Place Based Policies

COVID-19 has accelerated the digitalisation of working and social interactions. Global lockdowns to contain the pandemic have forced firms and workers to perform a wide range of daily functions through virtual means. This has led to greater uptake and acceptance of remote working, which will likely remain in the post-pandemic scenario. Governments and policy responses at the local and regional level can play a decisive role in supporting workers and firms in this transition. This report proposes a number of policy takeaways to guide short and long-term policy making to better prepare regions for what may be a ‘new normal’. The report relies on real-time subnational data to analyse changes in people’s mobility patterns and the determinants of remote working adoption across types of workers and regions. The report identifies different scenarios of settlement patterns that could emerge post-COVID-19, highlighting how changing patterns of work could impact on regional development and a range of policy areas, including infrastructure, healthcare and the environment.

English

Labour markets in the new normality

This chapter examines the structural effects of COVID-19 on the labour markets in a set of G7 countries. It starts by presenting evidence on the different workers' potential to shift from presence to remote working amid lockdowns and social distancing measures in Canada, Europe and the U.S. Then, for the United States, it documents the uneven effects of the COVID-crisis across groups of workers in the labour market and the importance of remote work for attenuating the adverse effects during the period. Lastly, it discusses the possible repercussions of the crisis on the inequalities in the labour market in the short and medium run.

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