Remote work and compensation inequality (ESCoE DP 2025-04)

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Remote work and compensation inequality (ESCoE DP 2025-04)

By Gianni De Fraja, Jesse Matheson, James Rockey, Shivani Taneja, Gregory Thwaites

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This paper examines how the rise of working-from-home (WFH) affects compensation inequality. Using a novel survey, we find that the option to WFH is highly valued by workers (worth 8% of wages) but concentrated among higher earners, suggesting increased inequality. However, using a simple model where WFH and in-person workers are complements, we show that increased WFH leads to lower wages for WFH workers, potentially offsetting the benefits of WFH. Empirically, workers in WFH-capable occupations experienced 2–7% lower wage growth post-pandemic, consistent with the theory. Overall, we find no change in inequality but a substantial increase in compensation.