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My home is my castle – the benefits of working from home during a pandemic crisis: evidence from Germany

This paper studies the relation between work and public health during the Covid-19 pandemic in Germany. Combining administrative data on SARS-CoV-2 infections and short-time work registrations, firm- and worker-level surveys and cell phone tracking data on mobility patterns, we find that working from home (WFH) is very effective in economic and public health terms. WFH effectively shields workers from short-term work, firms from Covid-19 distress and substantially reduces infection risks. Counties whose occupation structure allows for a larger fraction of work to be done from home experienced (i) much fewer short-time work registrations and (ii) less SARS-CoV-2 cases. Health benefits of WFH appeared mostly in the early stage of the pandemic and became smaller once tight confinement rules were implemented. Before confinement, mobility levels were lower in counties with more WFH jobs and counties experienced a convergence in traffic levels once confinement was in place.

Lead investigator:

Jean-Victor Alipour

Affiliation:

University of Munich

Primary topic:

Jobs, work, pay & benefits

Secondary topic:

Health, physical & mental

Region of data collection:

Europe

Country of data collection

Germany

Status of data collection

Complete

Type of data being collected:

From private company

Unit of real-time data collection

County/Municipality

Start date

2/2020

End date

4/2020

Frequency

One-off

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