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Post-pandemic Britons still spend more time working from home

Official data offers a glimpse of what the 'new normal' looks like.

Reuters
2 minute read
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Pedestrians on their way to work cross the London Bridge backdropped by the Tower Bridge in central London on Jan 27. Photo: AFP
Pedestrians on their way to work cross the London Bridge backdropped by the Tower Bridge in central London on Jan 27. Photo: AFP

British workers are spending more time working from home compared with pre-pandemic times despite the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions, according to official data released on Tuesday that offered a glimpse of what the "new normal" looks like.

In March 2020 the global coronavirus outbreak triggered a radical redesign of swathes of the world economy, forcing many firms and their workers to give up on the office temporarily and adapt to working from home.

Data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed some of those changes have become more permanent.

The ONS compared how people spent their time before the pandemic, in 2014/2015, with March 2021, when some Covid restrictions were in place, and with March 2022 when almost all restrictions across Britain were lifted.

The data showed paid British workers on average spent 101 minutes per day working from home in March this year, 79 minutes more than in 2014/2015. In March 2021, when a "stay at home" order was in place, the average was 110.

The data also showed how habits that Britons picked up during the pandemic - when many had more free time and less ability to socialise - were changing.

Time spent streaming or watching television in March 2022 was the lowest since the start of the pandemic, at an average 149 minutes per day. In March 2021, that figure was 176 minutes.

The amount of time spent doing gardening or DIY fell by nearly a third over that period, and less time was spent cleaning the house and reading books or newspapers.

And, while the amount of time spent exercising, an average of 25 minutes per day, was higher than the 19 minutes in 2014/15, it was below March 2021's 30 minutes.

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