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Europe

Work from home, but if you do we’ll cut your pay by 20%, law firm tells staff

By
Chloe Taylor
Chloe Taylor
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By
Chloe Taylor
Chloe Taylor
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May 3, 2022, 10:53 AM ET

A global law firm has offered its employees the option to work from home permanently—but only if they take a 20% pay cut.

Many companies are struggling to encourage their workforce back into the office as COVID restrictions are increasingly being eased in cities all over the world.

A recent survey found that 76% of Apple employees are unhappy with the tech giant’s return-to-office policy, which requires corporate workers to be in the office once a week.

Meanwhile, only around half of Goldman Sachs employees showed up to work at the company’s Manhattan headquarters when the office reopened in March, despite CEO David Solomon’s famous belief that remote work is “an aberration that we’re going to correct as quickly as possible.”  

Stephenson Harwood, a British law firm with offices in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, told Coins2Day that during the pandemic, it hired people for roles in London who were based outside of the capital on smaller salaries.

In the U.K., it is common for employees to have “London weighting” incorporated into their salaries to compensate for the increased costs associated with living and working in the capital.

Stephenson Harwood told Coins2Day that the option to work under a fully remote arrangement—where workers are never required to be in the office but earn less—was recently offered to all existing employees.

This means, for example, a newly qualified lawyer with an expected starting salary of £90,000 ($112,000) would earn £72,000 ($90,000) if choosing to work from home full time.

A spokesperson for the company said it has a hybrid working policy in place for workers who choose not to take up the offer: Employees have the option to work remotely for up to two days a week without their salaries being affected.

Stephenson Harwood believes this policy “strikes the right balance,” the spokesperson said, adding that it is consistent with the policies of many law firms in London.  

“We see value in being in the office together regularly, while also being able to offer our people flexibility,” they added.

While a number of big-name companies, including Airbnb, Twitter, and Spotify, allow employees to work from home permanently without any reduction in salary, many managers are critical of remote work.

A recent survey found that 77% of managers are willing to fire employees or cut their pay if they refuse to return to the office.

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