Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Taylor Swift followers can’t cease laughing at Travis Kelce’s newest social put up

    February 15, 2026

    Alphabet ramps up AI spending with as much as $185bn capital plan

    February 15, 2026

    Job Vacancies at Nadra Applied sciences Restricted NTL 2026 Job Commercial Pakistan

    February 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Sunday, February 15
    Trending
    • Taylor Swift followers can’t cease laughing at Travis Kelce’s newest social put up
    • Alphabet ramps up AI spending with as much as $185bn capital plan
    • Job Vacancies at Nadra Applied sciences Restricted NTL 2026 Job Commercial Pakistan
    • Bitcoin Devs’ Inaction on Quantum Will Frustrate Establishments: VC
    • Silent Hill 2 Remake Studio’s Big Surprise Is Layers Of Fear 3
    • Fans react as India set 176-run target for Pakistan
    • How to get into a16z’s super-competitive Speedrun startup accelerator program
    • Recipe: Meat and veggie potsticker or steamed dumplings – BC
    • Harry Kinds silently deleted Instagram app
    • Banning WFH is lunacy, and the politicians out of touch enough to mandate it are too
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    The News92The News92
    • Home
    • World
    • National
    • Sports
    • Crypto
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
    • Jobs
    • Insurance
    • Gaming
    • AI & Tech
    • Health & Fitness
    The News92The News92
    Home - Business & Economy - Banning WFH is lunacy, and the politicians out of touch enough to mandate it are too
    Business & Economy

    Banning WFH is lunacy, and the politicians out of touch enough to mandate it are too

    Naveed AhmadBy Naveed AhmadFebruary 15, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Let’s get something straight right at the outset: The idea of banning working from home is, in the vernacular of my disbelieving inner monologue, utter lunacy. Not merely daft. Not a bit ill-advised. But a spectacular, full-on intellectual car crash wearing a stupid hat.

    Let’s get something straight right at the outset: The idea of banning working from home is not merely daft, not a bit ill-advised, but a spectacular, full-on intellectual car crash wearing a stupid hat.

    And the fact that this notion is being flirted with seriously in political circles tells you everything you need to know about how out of touch this country’s Westminster bubble has become.

    If you’ve been reading my scribblings on this subject for the last decade, such as Why forcing a return to the office is a step backwards for business and Bodies, bums, cost money, can you go virtual, then you’ll know I’ve not exactly been shy about waving the flag for flexibility. I’ve argued that work isn’t a location; it’s a thing you do. Deadlines don’t care about Tube strikes. Creativity doesn’t flourish because you’ve got a corner desk with a view of Canary Wharf. Pencils don’t write better in the City.

    And yet here we are, in 2026, watching the same fossils who championed touchdown desks as if they were a breakthrough in human civilisation roll out the same old chestnuts about presenteeism, ‘office culture’, and “We have to see people at their desks!” — as if productivity is directly proportional to proximity to a swivel chair.

    What makes this iteration of absurdity particularly galling is the political context. The current political mood music suggests that Nigel Farage could well be the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Now, I am not here to start a partisan fracas, but I am here to call out nonsense wherever it crops up, regardless of which side of the aisle it’s draped in. And when someone positioned to lead the country describes working from home as something to ban, you have to wonder whether they’ve ever, you know, worked.

    If your understanding of remote working is limited to the fleeting glimpse you get when the BBC cuts to a home office with a bobble-head on a shelf, then yes, you might think working from home is an indulgence. A luxury. A mild form of leisure. But as anyone who has actually managed teams through screens, as I wrote in Managing your team through a small screen, will tell you, there’s nothing remotely relaxed about aligning global calendars, coaching through glitches, wiring up video calls while your dog thinks he’s invited, and delivering outcomes that matter.

    One of the clearest articulations I’ve read on this came from Mark Dixon, founder of Regus, yes, the flexible workspace titan with a vested interest in desks existing everywhere, and yet unambiguously clear that banning remote working is idiotic. His comments, in an interview with The Times, pierced the usual fog of clichés: flexibility is not the enemy of collaboration; it is its enabler. People don’t want to be forced back into a dungeon of desks five days a week; they want meaningful connection on their terms. If that means meeting in person for ideation and spending the rest of the week where they can function best, then great. If it means satellite offices closer to where people live, brilliant. But banning WFH altogether? Only someone with a pathological affection for sepia-tinted office fantasies could back that.

    Let’s unpack why this matters beyond the tedium of managerial turf wars, and to put my bona fides out there on this topic Capital Business Media – owners of Business Matters – has doubled turnover  in three years with not a single staff member being in the same ‘office’ as their colleagues.

    First: productivity. The best evidence we have, from countless businesses large and small, is that output does not collapse when people work from home. The idea that remote work is synonymous with loafing is a myth lazy commentators cling to because it’s a convenient continuation of their own nostalgia for commutes on Tube trains smelling faintly of regret.

    Second: talent. The modern workforce is not static; it does not orbit offices like electrons around a corporate nucleus. People prioritise flexibility, and talent migrates to where they find it. Companies that cling to “You must be here 9–5, no exceptions” do not become magnets for the best people; they become boarding houses for the most compliant. If banning WFH becomes legislation, businesses will reward political interference with a choice: move work abroad, automate it, or collapse under its own inertia.

    Third: the economy. There’s a pernicious assumption among some policymakers that an office full of bodies equals economic vitality. But let’s be honest, the office economy is a facade propped up by overpriced coffee, sandwich chains with dubious pension plans, and pastry carts wheeled out of a desire to feel busier than we are. Real economic value is created by effective, sustainable work, whether it’s done in a studio in Sussex, a flat in Glasgow, or an airport lounge in Zurich during a layover.

    Far from being a quaint perk, remote working is an economic force multiplier. It reduces carbon emissions from commuting, diminishes pressure on housing markets in overheated urban centres, and spreads spending power geographically. It’s not a threat to society; it’s an evolution of it.

    So let’s be clear: banning WFH isn’t just about where people sit. It’s about control. It’s about a cultural insistence on seeing busyness as virtue rather than effectiveness. It’s about politicians pining for a world they half-remember through the filmy lens of “office culture” brochures from the early 2000s.

    My suggestion? If anyone seriously proposes a ban on working from home, we should ask them this: “Have you ever delivered an entire quarterly business review over Zoom? Have you ever coordinated a multinational project without once stepping foot in an office? Have you ever actually assessed work by outcomes rather than appearances?”

    Until they can answer yes, I’d be wary of taking their advice on the future of work seriously.

    Because whatever happens next in Westminster, let’s not consign the world of work to a bunker called an office. That’s not progress. That’s nostalgia dressed up as policy. And in an era when adaptability is a competitive advantage, banning working from home isn’t just backward-looking, it’s lunacy.

    Read more:
    Banning WFH is lunacy, and the politicians out of touch enough to mandate it are too



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleDistrict Council Mianwali Job 2026 2026 Job Commercial Pakistan
    Next Article Harry Kinds silently deleted Instagram app
    Naveed Ahmad
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    Business & Economy

    Alphabet ramps up AI spending with as much as $185bn capital plan

    February 15, 2026
    Business & Economy

    Startup valuations cross $4b, outpacing peers

    February 15, 2026
    Business & Economy

    600MHz spectrum public sale subsequent month

    February 15, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    Oatly loses ‘milk’ branding battle in UK Supreme Courtroom

    February 12, 20261 Views

    ‘Fly excessive my angel’: 12-year-old lady dies by suicide amid bullying allegations

    February 7, 20261 Views

    Lenovo’s Qira is a Guess on Ambient, Cross-device AI—and on a New Type of Working System

    January 30, 20261 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Demo
    Most Popular

    Oatly loses ‘milk’ branding battle in UK Supreme Courtroom

    February 12, 20261 Views

    ‘Fly excessive my angel’: 12-year-old lady dies by suicide amid bullying allegations

    February 7, 20261 Views

    Lenovo’s Qira is a Guess on Ambient, Cross-device AI—and on a New Type of Working System

    January 30, 20261 Views
    Our Picks

    Taylor Swift followers can’t cease laughing at Travis Kelce’s newest social put up

    February 15, 2026

    Alphabet ramps up AI spending with as much as $185bn capital plan

    February 15, 2026

    Job Vacancies at Nadra Applied sciences Restricted NTL 2026 Job Commercial Pakistan

    February 15, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Advertise
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 TheNews92.com. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized reproduction or redistribution of content is strictly prohibited.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.