Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland

Workforce flexibility in regard to the time and location of work can offer many advantages for individuals, businesses, communities and countries. Whilst neither universally viable nor uniformly valuable, there are those who may have a preference for such flexibility and there is certainly untapped...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. Andrew Kelly, Luke Kelleher, Yulu Guo, Ciaran Deegan, Breanna Larsen, Shivani Shukla, Amy Collins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-09-01
Series:Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000228
_version_ 1811325634882830336
author J. Andrew Kelly
Luke Kelleher
Yulu Guo
Ciaran Deegan
Breanna Larsen
Shivani Shukla
Amy Collins
author_facet J. Andrew Kelly
Luke Kelleher
Yulu Guo
Ciaran Deegan
Breanna Larsen
Shivani Shukla
Amy Collins
author_sort J. Andrew Kelly
collection DOAJ
description Workforce flexibility in regard to the time and location of work can offer many advantages for individuals, businesses, communities and countries. Whilst neither universally viable nor uniformly valuable, there are those who may have a preference for such flexibility and there is certainly untapped positive potential to be explored across multiple impact categories. The COVID 19 pandemic has improved acceptability from both employee and employer perspectives and delivered a global ‘crash course’ in remote working. The varied potentials to work from anywhere, as well as differences in associated impact outcomes point to the value of targeted supports and careful planning. The Working from Anywhere Index (WFAI) offers a transferable fine scale spatial methodology to identify both the preferences and potential for working from anywhere. The value for policy support is demonstrated through application to a case country, Ireland, where illustrative scenarios explore the role of broadband provision, the placement of remote working hubs and the effect of shifts in employment types on the preferences and potential for working from anywhere. Impact analysis indicates that the scale of annual benefits for a plausible ‘2 day a week’ national working from anywhere scenario are substantial and offer the potential to save in the region of 1 bn car commuting kilometres per annum with associated societal benefits for emissions reduction and individual time savings.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T14:36:37Z
format Article
id doaj.art-09818ae1992147c0a55b5c3fad57996c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2665-9727
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T14:36:37Z
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
spelling doaj.art-09818ae1992147c0a55b5c3fad57996c2022-12-22T02:43:01ZengElsevierEnvironmental and Sustainability Indicators2665-97272022-09-0115100190Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for IrelandJ. Andrew Kelly0Luke Kelleher1Yulu Guo2Ciaran Deegan3Breanna Larsen4Shivani Shukla5Amy Collins6EnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, Ireland; UCD Environmental Policy, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, D04 V1W8, IrelandUCD Environmental Policy, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, D04 V1W8, Ireland; Corresponding author. EnvEcon Decision Support, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, Ireland.EnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, Ireland; UCD Environmental Policy, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, D04 V1W8, IrelandEnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, IrelandEnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, IrelandEnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, IrelandEnvEcon, 11 Priory Office Park, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 PH04, IrelandWorkforce flexibility in regard to the time and location of work can offer many advantages for individuals, businesses, communities and countries. Whilst neither universally viable nor uniformly valuable, there are those who may have a preference for such flexibility and there is certainly untapped positive potential to be explored across multiple impact categories. The COVID 19 pandemic has improved acceptability from both employee and employer perspectives and delivered a global ‘crash course’ in remote working. The varied potentials to work from anywhere, as well as differences in associated impact outcomes point to the value of targeted supports and careful planning. The Working from Anywhere Index (WFAI) offers a transferable fine scale spatial methodology to identify both the preferences and potential for working from anywhere. The value for policy support is demonstrated through application to a case country, Ireland, where illustrative scenarios explore the role of broadband provision, the placement of remote working hubs and the effect of shifts in employment types on the preferences and potential for working from anywhere. Impact analysis indicates that the scale of annual benefits for a plausible ‘2 day a week’ national working from anywhere scenario are substantial and offer the potential to save in the region of 1 bn car commuting kilometres per annum with associated societal benefits for emissions reduction and individual time savings.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000228RemoteWorkingFlexibilityEnvironmentWorkforceSpatial
spellingShingle J. Andrew Kelly
Luke Kelleher
Yulu Guo
Ciaran Deegan
Breanna Larsen
Shivani Shukla
Amy Collins
Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
Environmental and Sustainability Indicators
Remote
Working
Flexibility
Environment
Workforce
Spatial
title Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
title_full Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
title_fullStr Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
title_full_unstemmed Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
title_short Assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere: A spatial index for Ireland
title_sort assessing preference and potential for working from anywhere a spatial index for ireland
topic Remote
Working
Flexibility
Environment
Workforce
Spatial
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665972722000228
work_keys_str_mv AT jandrewkelly assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT lukekelleher assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT yuluguo assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT ciarandeegan assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT breannalarsen assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT shivanishukla assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland
AT amycollins assessingpreferenceandpotentialforworkingfromanywhereaspatialindexforireland