Ability To Work From Home: Evidence From Two Surveys And Implications For The Labor Market In The COVID-19 Pandemic

This article examines the relationship between workers’ ability to work at home, as captured in job characteristics measured by the Occupational Information Network, and the actual incidence of working at home, as measured by the American Time Use Survey and the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979. For occupations in which telework is feasible, the article also estimates the proportion of workers who actually teleworked for a substantial amount of time prior to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. The article concludes by examining recent (April 2020) employment estimates from the Current Population Survey, aiming to gauge how the initial employment effects of the pandemic differed between occupations in which telework is feasible and occupations in which it is not. 

Matthew Dey, Harley Frazis, Mark A. Loewenstein, and Hugette Sun | Monthly Labor Review

In an attempt to contain the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, states and localities across the country have adopted “social distancing” measures, closing businesses, and enacting stay-at-home orders. Many workers are now working remotely. Although teleworking had been on the rise even before the pandemic,1 it has now increased substantially, with more people working at home whenever possible.

A recent article by Erik Brynjolfsson et al. estimates that 31 percent of workers who were employed in early March had switched to working at home by the first week of April.2

Even when stay-at-home orders are relaxed, many workers may continue working at home until the pandemic is fully contained.

Of course, many jobs cannot be performed remotely and require that workers be physically present at their worksites.

Data on job characteristics provided by the Occupational Information Network (O*NET), together with occupational employment estimates from the Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) survey, make it possible to estimate the number of jobs that can and cannot be performed remotely.3

O*NET contains occupation-level measures not only of the knowledge and skills required by occupation but also on how and where the work associated with that occupation is carried out. Information captured in the O*NET categories “work context” and “general work activities” is especially helpful for determining whether a job cannot be done at home.

Examples of jobs that one would expect to be unsuitable for telework are jobs that involve operating equipment or interacting face to face with the public.

Using O*NET and OES data, for instance, Jonathan I. Dingel and Brent Neiman estimate that 63 percent of U.S. jobs require significant onsite presence and that the remaining 37 percent can be performed entirely at home.4

Simon Mongey, Laura Pilossoph, and Alex Weinberg provide evidence that information on working at home in the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) is consistent with the type of O*NET measures constructed by Dingel and Neiman.5

In a supplement to the 2017–18 ATUS, workers were asked whether they could work at home.6 Averaging the responses to this question across individuals, Mongey, Pilossoph, and Weinberg estimate the proportion of workers in broad (two-digit census) occupations who can work at home.

In addition, averaging O*NET-based estimates for more detailed occupations, they obtain an O*NET-based measure of the inability to work at home across two-digit occupations. Comparing the two measures, the authors find that, as predicted, the measures are inversely correlated.

In this article, we take a closer look at the relationship between the ability to work at home, as captured in job characteristics measured by O*NET, and the actual incidence of working at home, as measured by two U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics surveys—the ATUS and the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (NLSY79).

Rather than comparing broader occupational averages of the incidence of working at home and the ability to work at home, we analyze behavior at the individual level.

This approach allows us to (1) determine the incidence of classification errors (that is, the incidence of working at home in detailed occupations that would otherwise seem to preclude working at home) and (2) examine takeup rates (that is, the proportions of workers in detailed occupations who can work from home and actually spend a significant amount of time doing so).

Working at home in response to the pandemic is more likely to increase in occupations in which teleworking is feasible and the takeup rate is relatively low. In the final section of the article, we examine recent (April 2020) employment estimates from the Current Population Survey (CPS), aiming to gauge how the initial employment effects of the pandemic differed between occupations in which telework is feasible and occupations in which it is not.

Is the O*NET-based telework feasibility measure consistent with observed telework behavior in the ATUS and the NLSY79?

Because the questions in the ATUS and the NLSY79 differ, it is difficult to construct perfectly comparable definitions of teleworkers in the two surveys.

To avoid this difficulty, we formulate a plausible definition for each survey and then examine the degree to which the survey results conforming to that definition are consistent with the O*NET measure.

For the ATUS, our definition is based on whether workers who worked entirely at home on some days received pay for some of their time. For the NLSY79, our definition is based on the number of hours that respondents worked at home.

The ATUS is a single-day time-diary survey administered to a sample of individuals in households that have recently completed their participation in the CPS, the main labor force survey for the United States. The information on working at home used here is from the 2017–18 Leave and Job Flexibilities Module of the ATUS.

Administered to every respondent who was a wage or salary worker, this module has a sample size of 10,071. We classify workers as telecommuters if, in response to questions about working at home, they replied that they (1) were able to and did work at home, (2) worked entirely at home on some days, and (3) were paid for at least some of the hours they worked at home. The ATUS also provides information on other variables that may be related to working at home.

These variables include a worker’s education level, age, gender, race, ethnicity, and marital status; the presence of children in the household; the worker’s job status (full or part-time); and the size of the metropolitan area in which the worker resides.7

Following the methodology of Dingel and Neiman, we classify occupations on the basis of their telework feasibility and then merge this information with data from the ATUS.8 The results are summarized in Table A-1 of the appendix.

As indicated in the first data column of the table, approximately 54 percent of workers in the ATUS sample (1) are in occupations in which working at home is not feasible (according to the O*NET-based telework feasibility measure) and (2) did not telework. As shown in the second data column, about 2 percent of workers in the sample worked at home despite being in occupations in which telework is not feasible.

Dividing the latter percentage by the percentage of workers for which working at home is predicted to be infeasible yields a relatively low classification error rate of about 4 percent.

This result provides strong support for the O*NET-based measure, whose ruling out of telework for occupations in which working at home is deemed infeasible is correct about 96 percent of the time.

As shown in the third data column of Table A-1, about 33 percent of workers in the ATUS sample (1) are in occupations in which working at home is feasible (according to the O*NET-based telework feasibility measure) and (2) did not telework.

As seen in the fourth data column, the percentage of those who are in occupations in which telework is feasible and who did telework is about 11 percent. Dividing this percentage by the percentage of workers for which working at home is predicted to be feasible yields an estimated takeup rate of about 25 percent.

Table 1 shows estimates for the ability-to-telework rate, the classification error rate, and the takeup rate. The entries in the table’s first data column provide ability-to-telework rates by various worker characteristics.

One sees that workers with less education tend to be in jobs in which working at home is not feasible, as is the case for workers who are younger than 25, not married, or Hispanic. Teleworking is also less feasible in part-time jobs and in jobs found in nonmetropolitan areas.

Working at home is generally feasible in management, professional, and administrative support jobs, but not in most service, construction, transportation, and production jobs.

Similarly, while telework feasibility is high in the information, financial activities, professional and business services, and public administration industries, it is low in the leisure and hospitality, agriculture, and construction industries.

Table 1. Telework statistics, by demographic, occupational, industry, and job-task characteristics, ATUS and NLSY79 (in percent)

Category ATUS NLSY79
Ability-to-telework rate Classification error rate Takeup rate Ability-to-telework rate Classification error rate Takeup rate

All

43.6 3.9 24.7 44.8 5.6 21.6

Educational attainment

 

Less than a high school diploma

10.7 0.4 7.7 17.0 4.4 3.7

High school diploma, no college

24.5 1.4 11.3 30.3 4.0 12.8

Some college or associate’s degree

36.4 3.0 16.3 42.5 5.0 18.2

Bachelor’s degree and higher

67.5 10.8 31.4 70.5 11.3 28.7

Age

 

15 to 24 years

23.7 0.0 11.5

25 to 54 years

46.7 5.0 27.8

55 years and older

48.1 4.7 20.1

Comparable NLS age range (51–59)

46.6 5.1 22.2

Presence of children

 

No children

44.7 3.9 23.5 44.0 4.8 20.5

Children

42.0 4.0 26.6 50.1 11.4 28.4

Job-status

 

Full time

47.2 4.6 25.8 46.8 5.9 22.0

Part-time

28.7 1.9 17.1 32.2 4.0 18.3

Gender

 

Men

40.0 3.5 27.8 38.8 5.7 25.5

Women

47.6 4.4 21.9 51.5 5.5 18.4

Marital status

 

Not married

34.4 2.3 21.1 39.3 5.0 18.7

Married

50.2 5.4 26.5 47.7 5.9 22.9

Race or ethnicity

 

Non-Hispanic White

48.7 5.2 26.4 46.9 6.0 22.8

Black

39.5 2.8 24.2 33.5 3.9 16.0

Hispanic

28.9 1.5 14.4 39.0 4.9 12.8

Occupations

 

Management, business, and financial occupations

86.6 13.6 29.7 86.5 22.0 23.4

Professional and related occupations

64.4 8.2 28.1 64.3 7.7 28.5

Service occupations

7.9 2.0 7.0 13.4 4.2 6.3

Sales and related occupations

31.9 4.3 29.2 30.1 8.4 36.4

Office and administrative support occupations

59.2 5.9 10.4 61.5 4.6 7.7

Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations

0.0 0.9 0.0 0.0

Construction and extraction occupations

0.0 2.6 0.0 4.0

Installation, maintenance, and repair occupations

1.0 1.2 0.0 3.9 3.0 0.0

Production occupations

0.4 1.7 0.0 3.9 3.9 0.0

Transportation and material moving occupations

0.3 1.1 0.0 1.3 2.0 0.0

Industries

 

Agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting

8.3 3.0 20.4 16.0 29.7 25.3

Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction

55.9 28.0 26.3 15.0 0.0 52.6

Construction

17.3 2.6 13.0 21.8 6.3 10.5

Manufacturing

36.4 4.6 31.6 36.6 2.7 16.5

Wholesale and retail trade

26.9 2.1 19.3 29.3 2.4 22.8

Transportation and utilities

25.4 1.8 22.2 26.4 2.3 13.8

Information

71.2 4.2 36.9 77.3 16.8 37.3

Financial activities

77.9 17.2 29.6 75.3 11.2 27.3

Professional and business services

69.9 9.0 40.8 68.5 10.1 30.1

Education and health services

48.9 3.7 15.8 49.7 6.1 19.2

Leisure and hospitality

13.0 0.9 12.7 20.5 5.3 19.9

Other services

31.0 7.1 14.0 55.5 13.7 19.0

Public administration

65.2 7.3 16.5 54.9 3.5 13.7

Industry missing

50.2 12.3 30.4

Area

 

Nonmetropolitan area

31.8 1.5 10.8

Metropolitan area, unknown size

39.6 4.5 17.2

Metropolitan area, 100,000–250,000

40.4 2.5 28.1

Metropolitan area, 250,000–500,000

40.1 3.8 13.7

Metropolitan area, 500,000–1,000,000

42.4 4.8 21.6

Metropolitan area, 1,000,000–2,500,000

44.8 4.5 25.4

Metropolitan area, 2,500,000–5,000,000

49.5 6.0 31.0

Metropolitan area, 5,000,000+

48.8 4.0 29.5

PDII task measures

Time on physical tasks

 

Almost all

16.6 3.1 9.8

More than half

31.3 5.6 13.2

Less than half

54.1 7.0 20.3

Almost none

74.3 12.7 26.0

Time on repetitive tasks

 

Almost all

27.1 4.2 13.1

More than half

36.4 3.8 13.0

Less than half

51.6 6.3 20.0

Almost none

59.4 8.6 28.9

Time on managing or supervising

 

Almost all

53.1 6.7 19.8

Half or more

52.2 7.3 24.1

Less than half

44.0 5.8 21.3

Almost none

40.7 4.9 21.9

Solve problems of 30+ minutes

 

1+/day

55.5 7.7 26.8

1+/week

44.5 5.7 18.4

1+/month

36.1 5.1 12.7

Never

24.3 2.5 12.6

Use high school+ math

 

1+/day

46.7 4.3 26.2

1+/week

46.8 9.6 24.9

1+/month

52.3 10.6 22.6

Never

42.9 4.5 20.1

Longest document typically read at job

 

< 1 page

27.4 3.2 12.6

2–5 pages

50.1 6.1 19.9

6–10 pages

55.9 4.1 25.0

11–25 pages

60.3 11.9 29.5

25+ pages

68.6 11.7 26.0

Never

14.8 5.9 15.7

Frequency of personal contact with people other than coworkers or supervisors

 

A lot

40.7 5.3 21.3

A moderate amount

51.8 7.1 20.7

A little

49.4 6.2 19.1

None at all

42.8 4.2 28.8

Frequency of personal contact with customers or clients

 

A lot

36.8 5.7 18.7

Some

54.3 6.7 20.8

None at all

47.9 4.4 25.9

Frequency of personal contact with suppliers or contractors

 

A lot

44.8 6.7 17.4

Some

47.0 6.7 20.8

None at all

42.7 4.3 23.6

Frequency of personal contact with students or trainees

 

A lot

54.6 5.7 22.3

Some

42.7 3.9 20.2

None at all

42.8 6.7 22.3

Frequency of personal contact with patients

 

A lot

24.3 5.0 10.6

Some

49.2 4.6 27.9

None at all

47.2 5.7 22.0

Note: ATUS = American Time Use Survey, NLSY79 = National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979, NLS = National Longitudinal Surveys, PDII = Princeton Data Improvement Initiative, O*NET = Occupational Information Network.

Source: Authors’ calculations using the 2017–18 Leave and Job Flexibilities Module of the ATUS, the most recent interview (2016–17) of the 1979 cohort of the NLSY79, and job-content data provided by O*NET.

The NLSY79 is a second source of data on hours worked at home. It is a survey of 12,686 individuals who were ages 14 to 21 in 1979. These individuals were interviewed annually from 1979 to 1994, and every 2 years after that. We use information from the most recent NLSY79 interview (round 27), which was conducted from October 2016 through November 2017, when respondents were ages 51 to 59.

The sample used here is restricted to respondents who provided full information on their education, gender, race, wages, hours worked at home, occupation, and job tasks. The resultant sample size is 4,293.

CITATION & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Matthew Dey, Harley Frazis, Mark A. Loewenstein, and Hugette Sun, “Ability to work from home: evidence from two surveys and implications for the labor market in the COVID-19 pandemic,” Monthly Labor Review, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2020, https://doi.org/10.21916/mlr.2020.14. We are grateful to Dave Piccone for his help with the recent CPS estimates. We thank Dori Allard, Rachel Krantz-Kent, Joe Piacentini, and Bill Wiatrowski for their helpful comments.

Source: This article was originally published by the Monthly Labor Review of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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