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Covid-19 has persuaded Americans to leave city centres

HOW WILL the coronavirus pandemic affect cities? Almost as soon as it struck, the prognostications started to fly. Some suggested that white-collar workers would flee large conurbations for remote “Zoom towns”. Richard Florida, an urbanist, thought that some people might be drawn to distant suburbs and rural areas, while others would plump for appealing inner-city areas close to their jobs. Others reckoned that every urban flat and house vacated by a timid middle-aged person would be snapped up by a gleeful 20-something. The Economist Today A daily email with the best of our journalism Sign up Nicholas Bloom of Stanford University and Arjun Ramani, a student at that university who will take up an internship at

Opinion | Les limites du tout-télétravail

Opinion | Les limites du tout-télétravail
lesechos.fr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lesechos.fr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Are City Residents Saying Goodbye to Urban Living?

Thanks to more hybrid and remote work, some people are moving out of New York and San Francisco, but so far, there has been no exodus to Oklahoma City or Peoria, no revival of rural America or the Rust Belt.

Americans are done with five days a week in the office What does that mean for the economy?

From Bloomberg: Companies from Vanguard Group Inc. to Ford Motor Co. are permanently adopting 'hybrid' work schedules where employees spend some of the week at home and the rest at an office. Forecasting the implications of these long-term work shifts on the U.S. economy is no small task. Enter Nicholas Bloom, a Stanford University economist who started researching the economic impact of remote work years ago.

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