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
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.
""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."
Read at Inc
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]