Doug Hassebroek eats breakfast while on a video conference call working from home in Brooklyn, New York City, on April 24. Caitlin Ochs / Reuters
Doug Hassebroek eats breakfast while on a video conference call working from home in Brooklyn, New York City, on April 24. Caitlin Ochs / Reuters
Doug Hassebroek eats breakfast while on a video conference call working from home in Brooklyn, New York City, on April 24. Caitlin Ochs / Reuters
Doug Hassebroek eats breakfast while on a video conference call working from home in Brooklyn, New York City, on April 24. Caitlin Ochs / Reuters

What is the future of work from a kitchen table?


  • English
  • Arabic

I have worked remotely for most of my career, which has spanned nearly three decades. Most of my work has been in conflict zones. I have filed reports from airports, bus stations, bombed-out hotel rooms, army bases, the back seat of speeding taxis, and once, from a tomato patch in the middle of central Bosnia. Before mobile phones, I used satellite phones or I dictated from telephone booths if telephones worked. I managed.

I loved my freedom but I missed camaraderie and colleagues. I used to joke that I yearned for an office – for a water cooler, a briefcase and a shared coffee machine. But today, in Covid-19 times, it appears I am part of the lucky 37 per cent of people in the US who can actually work from home, according to two University of Chicago economists, Jonathan Dingel and Brent Neiman. The two just published an important policy paper, “How Many Jobs Can Be Done at Home?”

According to their analysis, I fit into a slot called “Knowledge Workers”. Knowledge Workers transitioned more comfortably into the Zoom work world. We are largely lawyers, academics, writers, office managers, journalists, accountants and financiers. We are not particularly happy about the pandemic. But we can manage it.

The larger percentage of the US population and of the world are not so fortunate. Many don’t have a computer, access to the internet, a spare corner where they can set up their home office – or a tomato patch.

Mr Dingel and Mr Neiman say that 45 per cent of people in San Francisco and Washington DC – home of big tech, government and NGOs – can work at home. But Las Vegas and Fort Myers, Florida – which rely on the hospitality industry – came in at 30 per cent. In Mexico, only 25 per cent of workers can do their job remotely; in the UK, only 30 per cent.

The Dingel-Neiman study is effectively about the future of work, but essentially it boils down to entitlement and inequality.

What happens to those in the agricultural industry? What about baristas, waiters, shop assistants and hotel staff who are laid off indefinitely because of the pandemic?

Teresa Mosqueda, a Seattle City Council member attends a meeting from home during the coronavirus in Seattle, Washington, US March 23. Reuters
Teresa Mosqueda, a Seattle City Council member attends a meeting from home during the coronavirus in Seattle, Washington, US March 23. Reuters

The economists’ takeaway is that the burden of the pandemic will fall on the poor. And the gap between the developed world and the undeveloped world –where 60 per cent do not have the internet – will be “starker”. Inequality will be exacerbated by the crisis.

Three years ago, while I was a Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, my colleagues produced a policy paper called The Future of Work. Their emphasis, pre-pandemic, was on artificial intelligence and how it would eventually outstrip humans in the workplace. Robots seemed scary but we had no idea that a virus would be our undoing.

New fields have been created in the wake of the coronavirus – contact tracers, for instance, can earn up to $40,000

Last month, CRF revisited the topic via a webinar.

“The future of work before Covid-19 had two dual challenges,” said Chike Aguh, the head of Economic Mobility Pathways at Education Design Lab, who was part of the Future of Work Task Force at CFR. He said a huge number of American jobs may be obviated entirely by technology because they won’t be needed. And a huge number of other jobs will be irrevocably changed so quickly that workers may not be able to keep up.

Life after Covid-19, Mr Aguh points out, is littered with more challenges. “We still need teachers, but it’s an entirely different skill set. How do you teach, facilitate, virtually?” He pointed out that new fields have been created in the wake of the coronavirus – contact tracers, for instance, can earn up to $40,000 in Baltimore. But these jobs won’t go to everyone.

How do we go forward with this new way of working while ensuring people are not left behind? What about women who previously balanced childcare with jobs? Remote work is largely more flexible. If you must adhere to a nine-to-five schedule and your two children are in the same room schooling on an iPad, you will be hindered (not to mention frustrated and tired).

There will also be fewer jobs for us to return to post-pandemic. Mr Aguh suggests people should “retrain and pray” – that is, retrain with a skill for the current job market – nursing, for instance, or education – and pray there will be sufficient jobs.

This is not exactly comforting to the legions of students graduating via Zoom who are desperate to pay off towering student loans. Globally, it is even bleaker. Economists from The International Monetary Fund extended the Dingel and Neiman analysis by using an OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) survey in 35 countries. They found that in less developed economies far fewer jobs could go remote.

Era Dabla-Norris, an economist from the IMF, told the BBC: “An accountant in the US is going to use technology very easily, and she has no problem whatsoever working from home. An accountant in a smaller city in India may be using a pen and paper, and have a ledger instead of a computer.” The pandemic will eventually end, but the transition period to the real world will have many difficulties.

Many people don’t actually want to go back to an office. Chief executives are planning on downshifting their offices; department stores are closing down; small businesses are going broke.

A PricewaterhouseCoopers survey from June showed that 83 per cent of US office workers want to continue to work from home at least one day a week after the pandemic, and 55 per cent of employers expect to offer that option.

But do we work as well in the absence of our co-workers? Without the creative tension that comes from a busy office?

The upside is workers can be more efficient if we don’t have to spend hours on a commute. People might be able to downsize and move out of cities to less pricey accommodation (which is a direct contrast to the 2008 financial meltdown when more people, especially in Asia, left rural areas and flocked to cities to find work).

But all this is going to be easier for the privileged. For the poor, it will be extremely tough. For the busboy whose local restaurant shut down, or the sales assistant in Bloomingdales. And what effect will this have on the class divide?

I spent the lockdown in France. Early on in the quarantine, the Moroccan novelist Leila Slimani – who comes from a wealthy Rabat family – came under attack when she wrote columns boasting about how much she was enjoying “confinement” in her beautiful country home.

Slimani struck a painful nerve, exposing France’s class divide, where people were confined to tiny spaces. If anything, quarantine made the gap between the haves and the have-nots even wider.

Slimani, and those like her, will continue to work from Marie Antoinette-splendour, while the rest of us might have to adapt and accept working from our kitchen tables. But one thing is certain: we do need to interact.

The future of work might mean flexible work weeks; it might mean some form of blended living – setting work and home boundaries. But it might mean we have to look at entirely new ways of connecting and collaborating; and a world that incorporates and hires different people with a different vision.

Mr Aguh ended his August talk on a positive note. “The thing about Americans during times of adversity,” he said, is that “Americans innovate. So the question is, as jurisdiction probably sits on top of those innovations, figure out how to scale them, accelerate them, and also help support them.”

Janine di Giovanni is a Senior Fellow at Yale University’s Jackson Institute for Global Affairs

Quick%20facts
%3Cul%3E%0A%3Cli%3EStorstockholms%20Lokaltrafik%20(SL)%20offers%20free%20guided%20tours%20of%20art%20in%20the%20metro%20and%20at%20the%20stations%3C%2Fli%3E%0A%3Cli%3EThe%20tours%20are%20free%20of%20charge%3B%20all%20you%20need%20is%20a%20valid%20SL%20ticket%2C%20for%20which%20a%20single%20journey%20(valid%20for%2075%20minutes)%20costs%2039%20Swedish%20krone%20(%243.75)%3C%2Fli%3E%0A%3Cli%3ETravel%20cards%20for%20unlimited%20journeys%20are%20priced%20at%20165%20Swedish%20krone%20for%2024%20hours%3C%2Fli%3E%0A%3Cli%3EAvoid%20rush%20hour%20%E2%80%93%20between%209.30%20am%20and%204.30%20pm%20%E2%80%93%20to%20explore%20the%20artwork%20at%20leisure%3C%2Fli%3E%0A%3C%2Ful%3E%0A
DUBAI SEVENS 2018 DRAW

Gulf Men’s League
Pool A – Dubai Exiles, Dubai Hurricanes, Bahrain, Dubai Sports City Eagles
Pool B – Jebel Ali Dragons, Abu Dhabi Saracens, Abu Dhabi Harlequins, Al Ain Amblers

Gulf Men’s Open
Pool A – Bahrain Firbolgs, Arabian Knights, Yalla Rugby, Muscat
Pool B – Amman Citadel, APB Dubai Sharks, Jebel Ali Dragons 2, Saudi Rugby
Pool C – Abu Dhabi Harlequins 2, Roberts Construction, Dubai Exiles 2
Pool D – Dubai Tigers, UAE Shaheen, Sharjah Wanderers, Amman Citadel 2

Gulf U19 Boys
Pool A – Deira International School, Dubai Hurricanes, British School Al Khubairat, Jumeirah English Speaking School B
Pool B – Dubai English Speaking College 2, Jumeirah College, Dubai College A, Abu Dhabi Harlequins 2
Pool C – Bahrain Colts, Al Yasmina School, DESC, DC B
Pool D – Al Ain Amblers, Repton Royals, Dubai Exiles, Gems World Academy Dubai
Pool E – JESS A, Abu Dhabi Sharks, Abu Dhabi Harlequins 1, EC

Gulf Women
Pool A – Kuwait Scorpions, Black Ruggers, Dubai Sports City Eagles, Dubai Hurricanes 2
Pool B – Emirates Firebirds, Sharjah Wanderers, RAK Rides, Beirut Aconites
Pool C – Dubai Hurricanes, Emirates Firebirds 2, Abu Dhabi Saracens, Transforma Panthers
Pool D – AUC Wolves, Dubai Hawks, Abu Dhabi Harlequins, Al Ain Amblers

Gulf U19 Girls
Pool A – Dubai Exiles, BSAK, DESC, Al Maha
Pool B – Arabian Knights, Dubai Hurricanes, Al Ain Amblers, Abu Dhabi Harlequins

Generation Start-up: Awok company profile

Started: 2013

Founder: Ulugbek Yuldashev

Sector: e-commerce

Size: 600 plus

Stage: still in talks with VCs

Principal Investors: self-financed by founder

Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
BACK%20TO%20ALEXANDRIA
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirector%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ETamer%20Ruggli%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarring%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ENadine%20Labaki%2C%20Fanny%20Ardant%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E3.5%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
THE CARD

2pm: Maiden Dh 60,000 (Dirt) 1,400m

2.30pm: Handicap Dh 76,000 (D) 1,400m

3pm: Handicap Dh 64,000 (D) 1,200m

3.30pm: Shadwell Farm Conditions Dh 100,000 (D) 1,000m

4pm: Maiden Dh 60,000 (D) 1,000m

4.30pm: Handicap 64,000 (D) 1,950m

The Comeback: Elvis And The Story Of The 68 Special
Simon Goddard
Omnibus  Press

Price, base / as tested From Dh173,775 (base model)
Engine 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo, AWD
Power 249hp at 5,500rpm
Torque 365Nm at 1,300-4,500rpm
Gearbox Nine-speed auto
Fuel economy, combined 7.9L/100km

House-hunting

Top 10 locations for inquiries from US house hunters, according to Rightmove

  1. Edinburgh, Scotland 
  2. Westminster, London 
  3. Camden, London 
  4. Glasgow, Scotland 
  5. Islington, London 
  6. Kensington and Chelsea, London 
  7. Highlands, Scotland 
  8. Argyll and Bute, Scotland 
  9. Fife, Scotland 
  10. Tower Hamlets, London 

 

Email sent to Uber team from chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi

From: Dara

To: Team@

Date: March 25, 2019 at 11:45pm PT

Subj: Accelerating in the Middle East

Five years ago, Uber launched in the Middle East. It was the start of an incredible journey, with millions of riders and drivers finding new ways to move and work in a dynamic region that’s become so important to Uber. Now Pakistan is one of our fastest-growing markets in the world, women are driving with Uber across Saudi Arabia, and we chose Cairo to launch our first Uber Bus product late last year.

Today we are taking the next step in this journey—well, it’s more like a leap, and a big one: in a few minutes, we’ll announce that we’ve agreed to acquire Careem. Importantly, we intend to operate Careem independently, under the leadership of co-founder and current CEO Mudassir Sheikha. I’ve gotten to know both co-founders, Mudassir and Magnus Olsson, and what they have built is truly extraordinary. They are first-class entrepreneurs who share our platform vision and, like us, have launched a wide range of products—from digital payments to food delivery—to serve consumers.

I expect many of you will ask how we arrived at this structure, meaning allowing Careem to maintain an independent brand and operate separately. After careful consideration, we decided that this framework has the advantage of letting us build new products and try new ideas across not one, but two, strong brands, with strong operators within each. Over time, by integrating parts of our networks, we can operate more efficiently, achieve even lower wait times, expand new products like high-capacity vehicles and payments, and quicken the already remarkable pace of innovation in the region.

This acquisition is subject to regulatory approval in various countries, which we don’t expect before Q1 2020. Until then, nothing changes. And since both companies will continue to largely operate separately after the acquisition, very little will change in either teams’ day-to-day operations post-close. Today’s news is a testament to the incredible business our team has worked so hard to build.

It’s a great day for the Middle East, for the region’s thriving tech sector, for Careem, and for Uber.

Uber on,

Dara

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting 

2. Prayer 

3. Hajj 

4. Shahada 

5. Zakat 

Global Fungi Facts

• Scientists estimate there could be as many as 3 million fungal species globally
• Only about 160,000 have been officially described leaving around 90% undiscovered
• Fungi account for roughly 90% of Earth's unknown biodiversity
• Forest fungi help tackle climate change, absorbing up to 36% of global fossil fuel emissions annually and storing around 5 billion tonnes of carbon in the planet's topsoil

Nayanthara: Beyond The Fairy Tale

Starring: Nayanthara, Vignesh Shivan, Radhika Sarathkumar, Nagarjuna Akkineni

Director: Amith Krishnan

Rating: 3.5/5

'Will%20of%20the%20People'
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EArtist%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EMuse%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ELabel%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EWarner%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%202.5%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
GAC GS8 Specs

Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo

Power: 248hp at 5,200rpm

Torque: 400Nm at 1,750-4,000rpm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 9.1L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh149,900

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Specs
Engine: Electric motor generating 54.2kWh (Cooper SE and Aceman SE), 64.6kW (Countryman All4 SE)
Power: 218hp (Cooper and Aceman), 313hp (Countryman)
Torque: 330Nm (Cooper and Aceman), 494Nm (Countryman)
On sale: Now
Price: From Dh158,000 (Cooper), Dh168,000 (Aceman), Dh190,000 (Countryman)