Working from home is ‘not doing proper work’ says former Asda boss

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Working from home is ‘not doing proper work’ says former Asda boss
Author: Howard Mustoe
Published: Jan, 20 2025 10:20

Lord Stuart Rose told the BBC that working from home was helping stoke the economy’s “general decline”. Working from home is harming productivity and risks creating workers who are “not doing proper work,” according to the former boss of Asda and Marks & Spencer.

Lord Stuart Rose, a Conservative life peer who has also led high street chains including Burton Group and Argos, told the BBC that working from home was helping stoke the economy’s “general decline”. Speaking on BBC One’s Panorama programme, he said: “We have regressed in this country in terms of working practices, productivity and in terms of the country’s wellbeing, I think, by 20 years in the last four.”.

Different companies have taken radically different approaches to working from home of late, with some firms like Boots, Amazon and JP Morgan telling head office workers to be in the office every working day. Others, like Spotify, allow workers to choose and others still have taken a softer approach by making their offices nicer to be in, with free coffee and snacks, in a bid to get their staff to choose office work themselves.

The topic has become a political football as the government aims to strengthen workers’ rights to request home working while Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has criticised a blanket approach to home working. She told TalkTV in September: “I find it extraordinary that Labour are scraping the policy barrel here to find more ways of flexible working when actually we need to get more people into the workplace. They are not learning, they’re not getting the skills at the same rate they used to, which is one of the challenges of working from home.”.

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