ABSTRACT

Telecommuting has been regarded as a powerful tool to reduce traffic congestion, pollution and energy consumption. It also supposed to improve lifestyle quality and job satisfaction by providing employees with flexible schedules with which to address their work load and personal requirements whilst also enhancing recruitment capability and productivity and significantly reducing costs. Nevertheless, a strong resistance to the adoption of telecommuting still persists.

In this book, first published in 1996, state of the art demand modelling techniques are used to delve into critical issues raised by the question of telecommuting. The benefits and costs of telecommuting are investigated in an effort to provide concrete evidence to inform the private sector’s adoption decision process and the public sector’s policy design. This title will be of interest to students of business studies and human resource management.

chapter I|15 pages

Introduction

chapter II|10 pages

The State-of-the-Art

chapter III|17 pages

Analytical Framework

chapter IV|16 pages

A Survey of Telecommuting Preferences

chapter V|42 pages

Model System Estimation Results

chapter VI|30 pages

Analysis of the Results

chapter VII|7 pages

Conclusion

chapter |6 pages

A – The Employer’s Survey

chapter |10 pages

Employee’s Telecommuting Survey