One in three office workers want to continue working from home after coronavirus threat is over

One in three office workers want to continue working from home after the coronavirus threat is over, a survey has revealed.  

The study from the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) found that 32 per cent of people are expecting to at least partially work from home even after the lockdown has ended.

The survey also showed a strong demand from Brits for more flexible working, up from a tenth in 2019, as reported by The Telegraph.

Pablo Shah, a senior economist at the CEBR, told the newspaper: ‘This seismic shift, taking place in months rather than decades, will transform the worlds of property, transport, retail, leisure and, not least, fashion. Ten years ago, this would not have been possible.’ 

The research further indicated that between 25 per cent and 30 per cent of employees will be working from home on any one day in 2021.

It comes as Boris Johnson altered guidance on Friday for home workers in an effort to get them back to offices and save Britain’s High Streets which continue to be deserted despite the easing of lockdown restrictions. 

Commuters wearing face masks walk through the ticket barriers at Waterloo Station in London on June 15

Fewer than one in six workers in cities have returned to the office – fuelling fears over the survival of cafes, pubs and restaurants. 

However Mr Johnson’s new guidance put him at odds with Sir Patrick Vallance, the Government’s chief scientific adviser, who told MPs on Friday  that working remotely ‘remains a perfectly good option’.

He then went even further as he said many companies had found working from home had not been ‘detrimental to productivity’ and as a result there is no need to move away from the policy. 

Yesterday the Foreign Secretary admitted there will be more remote working even after the coronavirus threat has passed. 

But stressed that the country was in the middle of a ‘severe economic downturn’ and it would help if fewer people worked from home now that the virus is receding. 

Yesterday the Foreign Secretary admitted there will be more remote working even after the coronavirus threat has passed

Yesterday the Foreign Secretary admitted there will be more remote working even after the coronavirus threat has passed

However attitudes to returning to the office appear to be changing, poll released at the weekend has suggested. 

It found 54 per cent believed it was worth the risk of travelling back to work to avoid an economic crash, the Sun on Sunday found. 

In an interview at the weekend, Boris Johnson said he wanted to avoid a second nationwide lockdown, comparing it to a ‘nuclear deterrent’. 

He told the Sunday Telegraph that he ‘certainly’ does not want another blanket shutdown and ‘nor do I think we will be in that position again’. 

The new guidance states that from August 1, employers can urge workers to come back to their office so long as it is Covid-secure. 

Mr Raab said yesterday on BBC1’s Andrew Marr Show: ‘What we have said is from August 1, while we’re carefully monitoring the virus, we do need to get the economy back firing on all cylinders as best we can.

Commuters wearing a face mask travel on TfL Victoria Line underground train carriages, heading towards central London, on June 15

Commuters wearing a face mask travel on TfL Victoria Line underground train carriages, heading towards central London, on June 15

‘We know we’re in the middle of a severe downturn. And so we’re making sure, with employers, that they’ve got the Covid-secure workplaces in place and we’ve had great co-operation from business.

‘And we’re also saying to employers – you’ve got this remote working facility, we know that’s important. I think we’ll all do a bit more remote working in the future.

‘But we also trust employers to say, ‘Actually, do you know what? We do need more people coming back to work’. And therefore we’re giving them that discretion. I think that’s right.’

Some of Britain’s largest employers say they will allow staff to work from home for months to come.

In London, only one worker in eight has gone back. In the City, just 800 of Goldman Sachs’ 6,000 London staff have returned. 

Fewer than 2,000 of the 12,000 at JP Morgan are back. The figures come from an analysis of mobile phone data in 67 cities by the Centre for Cities think-tank on behalf of the Times.

The data suggests that Basildon in Essex has seen the highest proportion of staff go back, at 49 per cent, and Edinburgh the least at 12 per cent.

Workers in the biggest cities are the least likely to have returned amid fears over the risk of long commutes on public transport.

The figures correspond with official data showing that rail services were operating at only 16 per cent capacity. The roads are back to 86 per cent of normal levels.

 Andrew Carter, of Centre for Cities, said: ‘Many office workers understandably will continue to work from home even as Covid-19 restrictions lift, and whilst this may well be the right decision for them as individuals, for the national economy the sum of these decisions will have a cost.’