Home Work-From-Home Trend Costs Manhattan $12 Billion Per Year In Lost Revenue

    Work-From-Home Trend Costs Manhattan $12 Billion Per Year In Lost Revenue

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    Work-From-Home Trend Costs Manhattan $12 Billion Per Year In Lost Revenue A new report has put a price on exactly what the “work from home” trend has cost the office-laden city of Manhattan: a stunning $12 billion per year.ย  Working at home means that office workers who would normally be out and about are spending $12 billion less than what they spent before the pandemic, according toย a new Bloomberg News study. The average worker is spending about 30% less time in the office, meaning that spending on food and entertainment has fallen by about $4,700 per person,ย data from Stanford University shows. On a per-person basis, the figure is higher than anywhere else – by more than 50%, the report shows. “People simply have not returned to full-time in-office work,” NBC News wrote in a follow up.ย  Bloomberg wrote: That means the average worker is spending $4,661 less per year on meals, shopping and entertainment near their offices in New York. That compares to $3,040 in San Francisco and $2,387 in Chicago. These behaviors are most entrenched in cities with longer commutes, a higher proportion of white-collar workforces and longer-lasting pandemic restrictions. They also noted that worker attendance at most offices rose in Q4 2022, but just to the level of 43% of pre-pandemic. The number falls to just 23% on Fridays and peaks at 51% on Tuesdays. Even food truck owners are witnessing the fall off.ย Samโ€™s Falafel owner Emad Ahmed said that he only makes about 30% of his pre-Covid revenue on Mondays and Fridays. He is stationed inย Zuccotti Park. โ€œMonday, Friday, forget about it,โ€ he said.ย โ€œYou lose money when nobody is here.โ€ The ultimate result for the city could be a 40% drop in office market value going forward. It could cost the city $5 billion in tax revenue, Bloomberg estimates.ย  Columbia University professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh called the trend an “urban doom loop” and said that the tax shortfall is a “big hole that will need to be plugged with new taxes, lower spending.โ€ Michelle Meyer, North America chief economist at Mastercard Economics Institute, told Bloomberg:ย โ€œPeople have changed their lifestyle and their behavior. If you are working from home that day, youโ€™re not commuting into your office, and going to the bodega next to your office.โ€ โ€œNew York City canโ€™t run from home,” Mayor Eric Adams commented, after directing government employees back to the office. “It’s time.” Tyler Durden Tue, 02/14/2023 – 22:25

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