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    Home » Blog » For federal employees, remote work ought to be exception, not rule

    For federal employees, remote work ought to be exception, not rule

    February 7, 2025Updated:February 7, 2025 Business & Economy No Comments
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    Over at the party counseling program that is Slate publication’s advice column, the latest democratic to mourn their economic woes whines that after suddenly becoming a first-time homebuyer,” the utter worst-case scenario happened”. Has Hurricane Helene destroyed the house? Did the Palisades Fire completely burn it? A Soros prosecutor’s repeated release of a career crime without parole for the burglary of the home in question

    Nope. About 1 million federal employees have been ordered by President Donald Trump to return to the office permanently, as the majority of the nation did four years ago and thousands of essential workers rarely stopped doing. But despite the absurdity of Trump’s desire, federal workers have fulminated, with thousands protesting across Washington and at least 40, 000 federal employees, or almost 2 % of Uncle Sam’s complete labor, accepting a stated eight months of severance payments to leave before the return-to-office date.

    Remote or cross job did not begin with the coronavirus pandemic, though 2020 did quicken its rise. Additionally, work flexibility has proven to be a pretty net economic benefit in the private market. But when it comes to national work, and particularly those workers staffing Washington, Trump is in the right here: Cross work, deemed telecommuting in government vernacular, and distant work, considered working from home full time, ought to be considered the exception, not the rule.

    For all the furor over Trump’s order, it doesn’t even affect the majority of the federal government’s 2.28 million employees. 54 % of federal employees worked entirely on-site, according to a study conducted by the Office of Management and Budget last year. Only 10 %, or 228, 000, are in fully remote positions, such as the author of the Slate letter.

    That leaves roughly a third of the federal workforce that was telework-eligible, or otherwise hybrid in some capacity. And those roughly 850, 000 spent an average of 61.2 % of their regular working hours on-site. In other words, if a worker leaves Washington, more than half of their jobs are completely unaffected by the order, and 10 % of fully remote workers are completely screwed. The typical employee will have to switch from working on-site three days a week to five days a week for the third of hybrid workers.

    Particularly high-skilled sectors in the private sector have embraced fully remote employment. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, nearly half of all employees in the finance, securities, and insurance industries worked remotely as of 2022, compared to the vast majority of those who worked in publishing and computer systems design were remote.

    The share of U. S. employment spent working from home, just 6 % before the pandemic, has stabilized to roughly 25 % as of last year, and remote work has offered demonstrable benefits to the broader economy. According to the International Monetary Fund, the expansion of remote employment increased the number of disabled people entering the workforce by at least 2 million, and remote work is perhaps the only policy change that has a statistically significant impact on raising our birthrate. According to a study, remote or hybrid workers are 3 % more likely than their fully on-site counterparts to try to have children and 6 % more likely than their counterparts to get married.

    But the public sector is a different ballgame. The process for firing federal employees is intentionally laborious, whereas the majority of private sector employees can be fired at any time and for any reason. Employers must give them a 30-day advance notice and explanation of alleged misconduct before a termination can take effect, according to federal employees ‘ right to “due process.” Then, if the firing is over, federal employees have the right to file a complaint with the Office of Special Counsel, request an independent attorney’s opinion, and be reinstated with back pay and benefits if the appeal is successful.

    The BLS explicitly excludes the public sector from its analysis of changes to labor productivity, even though private companies are beholden to stakeholders that incentivize them to maximize profit, which leads to persistent productivity growth only enhanced by strategically capitalizing on remote employment for higher-performing and disproportionately skilled workers. When more frequently measured in other developed countries, private sector productivity tends to consistently outpace public sector productivity.

    Total output divided by total input, as the formula’s most cliched interpretation would suggest that the government productivity trajectory is disastrous. This inefficiency is reflected in the fact that our annual federal deficit accounts for more than 6 % of our entire GDP.

    WASHINGTON EXAMINER CLICK HERE TO READ MORE.

    Federal employers may be able to relax their standards to the prepandemic baseline over time to continue lowering the cost of office space and allowing experienced workers to telework. However, the main goals of the return-to-office order are to self-select the least motivated employees from the federal workforce and affirm the fact that federal employees serve the taxpayers rather than the other way around.

    Ultimately, if it wants to reap the benefits and flexibility of private-sector employees, the public sector may need to adopt the private-sector rules of at-will employment and more transparency in productivity and performance metrics. Until then, back to the office, it is.

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