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Remote work, not AI, fuels US productivity boom, says Stanford economist

A Stanford economist suggests that the recent surge in American productivity, marked by a 2% annual increase since 2020, is primarily driven by the widespread adoption of remote work policies rather than artificial intelligence. Nicholas Bloom, who studied the Great Resignation, points to reduced commuting times and fewer office distractions as key factors, noting a direct correlation between the rise of work-from-home and productivity gains. Despite this, many large companies are mandating a return to the office, a move Bloom argues is counterproductive and potentially driven by factors other than productivity, advocating instead for a hybrid model. AI

Summary written by gemini-2.5-flash-lite from 1 source. How we write summaries →

IMPACT Remote work policies are highlighted as the primary driver of recent productivity gains, potentially overshadowing AI's current impact.

RANK_REASON Article presents an economist's opinion on the drivers of productivity, contrasting AI with remote work, without new data or a primary source release.

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Remote work, not AI, fuels US productivity boom, says Stanford economist

COVERAGE [1]

  1. Fortune TIER_1 · Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez ·

    America’s productivity boom started before AI, and a Stanford economist who decoded the Great Resignation says working from home is the reason why

    National data show “a clear post-2020 surge in productivity growth exactly when WFH ramped up,” said Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom.