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The FINANCIAL - Working from home: comparing the data

The FINANCIAL - Working from home: comparing the data
finchannel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from finchannel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Journalism diversity slow to improve although industry numbers up

The totals should be treated with some caution because they are aggregated from four quarterly surveys of 60,000 households and 150,000 over-16s each. The survey has a margin of error of 6,000 and journalists make up about 0.3% of the UK workforce. Journalists are defined as those in the category: “journalists, newspaper and periodical editors”. In 2018 the survey estimated there were 78,000 journalists in the UK. By 2020, this had increased to 96,000 –  the highest figure ever recorded in the Office for National Statistics’ Labour Force Survey. The Annual Population Survey, also put together by the ONS, put the total of journalists on 103,000 in 2020. This survey also has a margin of error of 6,000, meaning the two figures could statistically be the same.

Hybrid return-to-office models could create subcaste of workers

Hybrid return-to-office models could create subcaste of workers By Megan Cerullo Hybrid work models could create divisions More than a year after companies across the globe sent workers scurrying home amid the spread of COVID-19, some employers are encouraging and even ordering people back to the office. An estimated 80,0000 municipal workers in New York City went back on the job on Monday, while JPMorgan Chase, the country s largest bank, said it expects most of its U.S.-based employees to return to their offices come July. Goldman Sachs wants its U.S. and UK employees back at their desks by June. 

WFH Means Longer Hours, Fewer Bonuses 4 Key Takeaways From a Major Report

Alistair Berg/Getty Images Remote workers were more likely to work overtime and less likely to get bonuses, for example. Insider rounds up four key takeaways from the report. The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted bold predictions that the future of work will be from home, after millions were forced out of offices for more than a year but able to do their jobs remotely. But this week, the UK s Office for National Statistics (ONS) published a major report on the phenomenon based on surveys of hundreds of thousands of people over nearly a decade from the country s Annual Population Survey – and made some startling findings.

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