Remote work reduces productivity
High-quality academic evidence, including a 2024 meta-analysis and multiple systematic reviews, contradicts the claim by showing that remote and hybrid work models typically maintain or improve objective labor productivity. The claim treats 'remote work' as a monolithic category, failing to distinguish between fully remote and hybrid models, which empirical data suggests have different productivity outcomes.
The claim that remote work reduces productivity is contradicted by a comprehensive 2024 meta-analysis of 108 studies [1], which found that remote work intensity actually has small but beneficial effects on supervisor-rated performance and multiple consequential employee outcomes. This meta-analysis indicates that remote workers generally achieve better outcomes than their office-based counterparts, even when working away from the office extensively [1]. Furthermore, a 2025 systematic review [10] cites experimental evidence (Bloom et al.) showing a 13% increase in productivity for teleworkers when supported by appropriate managerial systems.
While some research identifies specific challenges such as reduced communication synergy and spontaneity [2, 8], these are frequently balanced by increased task efficiency, autonomy, and reduced office distractions [2, 3, 8]. For instance, a study of 80 respondents in India [8] reported higher task efficiency and improved work-life balance among remote workers. Additionally, hybrid work models have been specifically identified as improving employee retention without damaging performance [4].
Systematic reviews from 2025 and 2026 [5, 10] conclude that the impact of remote work on productivity is generally positive when organizational practices, digital tools, and role characteristics are aligned. Rather than a blanket reduction in output, the evidence suggests that productivity is context-dependent and often enhanced by the flexibility and reduced cognitive load provided by remote environments [3, 9, 10].
Sumber
A dual pathway model of remote work intensity: A meta‐analysis of its simultaneous positive and negative effects
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/b8603cdd32dcf3634776070309e1240fd63e5f72A Comparative Analysis of Onsite and Remote Work Productivity: Evidence from an Insurance Firm
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/248dda9d26bf10f15e75bffdcdf531256a6eb9e7Assessing the Effect of Remote Work on Employee Performance and Organisational Productivity: A Comparative Analysis of Traditional and Remote Work Settings
https://doi.org/10.61841/n969pv33Remote work – the new normal needs more research
https://www.sjweh.fi/article/4213A Systematic and Conceptual Review of the Impact of Remote Work on Employee Productivity and Well-Being
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/018e5422fece38c25cc15dbf313036ad4dc2d9c2A systematic review of agrivoltaics on productivity, profitability, and environmental co-benefits
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/cb3088cd591fcb89cefd46d5cbf3207744082c3dRemote work transition amidst COVID-19: Impacts on presenteeism, absenteeism, and worker well-being-A scoping review.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0307087Remote Work Realities in Post-Covid India: Productivity Without Communication Synergy
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/8817a8133dfdcaa7e66fd2b4dfae99917634d6ceAI-DRIVEN DATA SCIENCE MODELS FOR REAL-TIME TRANSCRIPTION AND PRODUCTIVITY ENHANCEMENT IN U.S. REMOTE WORK ENVIRONMENTS
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/1c0e6d7a523d2db656c32856ac9d0dc139b00407Impact of Gender-Based Policies on Employee Productivity and Organizational Growth
https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/fd19f90a36f7c3903548cfba84f6cfad6b819e8bFactcheck
APA 7th Edition