Posted on 10/03/2022 4:27:33 PM PDT by FarCenter
Thanks, Pence-FRAUDci.
My former company closed their massive call center in Austin once all the employees started working from home.
Cottage demand is up?
That’s not much of a loss overall.
All the restaurants, delis, stores, etc., that relied on office workers being nearby with money to spend ... what of them?
They’re done. Stuff happens...oh well!
Those sorts of businesses are hurting and some have probably closed permanently.
Use it to create residential housing?
This is why there’s a push to get workbees back to the office. That’s a lot of tax money gone bye-bye.
Just as I predicted in March 2020 ...
Economic Darwinism. (Many of them won't be coming back.)
They're not putting the toothpaste back into the tube. It's obvious that many people don't have to shuffle into the workplace five days a week, and there are employers more than willing to hire those who have no interest in playing that game anymore.
For the employers that insist people return to the office, the price they will pay for the unnecessary panic in March of 2020 will be a high one; they will find themselves either allowing staff to remain at home or losing them altogether.
Time to start converting them to residential space of people have a place to live that doesn’t cost $1 million.
That is one job that is easily remote. You will have to be on "call" every minute except when you are on a break or taking a lunch. It is specific enough so everyone knows what they are expected to do. But other jobs, we'll see the employers require their employees return to the office.
Can we ever just say "prices are going to come down"? Is everything a danged apocalypse now? (See what I did there?)
I suppose calm analysis doesn't sell papers.
Here in L.A. it’s the REVERSE. They are selling / leasing warehouse space for ecommerce and manufacturing. Just spoke with a couple of rich Jew owners who sell on Amazon and Ebay and they are having problems leasing / buying buildings. for expansion.
Manufacturing is coming back to L.A.?
I’m never going back. I won’t even agree to work on a hybrid basis. Its 100% remote or I look for some other opportunity.
They’re dead. A lot more money is going to stay in the suburbs or move out of the big cities and to small towns and to rural areas.
For the first time in 150 years since the start of industrialization, the economic forces are going to cause people to move out of big cities.
I enjoy going in. Run a charity auction house. Most of it is online sales but I have fun. Something to be said about getting work done, physically working with the product and stuff. The people I work with are awesome.
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