Abstract Using job posting wage data, we find a substantial decrease in the urban wage premium for occupations with high working-from-home (WFH) adoption following the COVID-19 pandemic, accompanied by an employment shift away from large cities. Based on a conceptual framework, the empirical findings suggest that WFH adoption lowered the productivity premium of large cities. A skill-level decomposition reveals that the urban wage premium decline was largely driven by reduced wage returns to interpersonal skills in large cities, suggesting that the reduced urban productivity premium was a result of weakened agglomeration economies due to decreased interpersonal interactions in large cities.
Liu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.