In the United States, the past decade has been marked by booming cities, soaring rents, and a crush of young workers flocking to job-rich downtowns. Although these are heady days for pavement-pounding urbanists, a record 2.6% of American employees now go to their jobs without ever leaving their houses. That's more than walk and bike to work combined.
These numbers come from a Quartz analysis of data from the US census and the American Community Survey. The data show that telecommuting has grown faster than any other way of getting to workâup 159% since 2000. By comparison, the number of Americans who bike to work has grown by 86% over the same period, while the number who drive or carpool has grown by only 12%. We've excluded both part-time and self-employed workers from these and all results.
I'd work from home, but there's no foosball table and the coffee sucks...
(Score: 3, Interesting) by bzipitidoo on Sunday April 16 2017, @03:27AM
Depends on your home environment. Right now I have demanding family members who will not give me a moment's peace if I try to work from home. It wasn't always like that, and for a year I did work from home. Not having to commute in rush hour is gold, and I happily accepted a 10% pay cut for that perk.