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shinryuu10/12/20241 replyview on HN

At the same time if they get worse talent because of it they could get lower productivity because of it


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akoboldfrying10/12/2024

Agreed. So I think the question is: Which effect dominates?

Both effects depend greatly on whether most other employers in the industry agree amongst themselves on whether to allow WFH: If everyone allows WFH, or everyone forbids it, there's no incentive to change employers, so these are stable equilibria, all other things being equal. Employers prefer the no-WFH equilibrium since (they believe) that leaves productivity highest.