Why Employees Are Giving Up Remote Work and Moving Back to Urban Centers
Briefly

Why Employees Are Giving Up Remote Work and Moving Back to Urban Centers
""After a pandemic-era exodus from major cities, remote workers are gradually migrating back," a Deel statement said about the geographic dispersal of employees that reached its peak in 2022."
"Deel recorded a nearly 60 percent surge in the number of U.S. jobs for artificial intelligence model trainers, indicating a strong demand in the tech sector."
The pandemic initially prompted a significant migration of employees from urban areas due to remote work flexibility. However, recent survey data indicates a reversal, with many workers returning to major cities as labor markets tighten and return-to-office mandates increase. The State of Global Hiring report by Deel highlights that workers are now relocating closer to cities like New York and Los Angeles. A surge in jobs, particularly in artificial intelligence, is driving this trend, as businesses seek to reinforce in-person work arrangements.
Read at Inc
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]