[0:00]Remote work solved a problem nobody expected. Corporate fraud dropped by almost 50%. Researchers at Yale studied companies during the pandemic. They found that firms best set up for remote work saw much less financial misconduct. Why? Because fraud is rarely a solo act. It's usually a team sport. Cooking the books often requires multiple people coordinating stories, covering for each other, and building trust over time. And where does that trust come from? Hallways, lunches, after work drinks. Those casual moments that build relationships can also build collusion. Then the pandemic hit, everyone went home. Suddenly, the infrastructure for conspiracy disappeared. Slack messages leave records. Zoom calls feel formal, and it's much harder to maintain a secret plan when you're not seeing each other every day. So, while we were arguing about productivity, remote work was quietly doing something else. It was making fraud harder to pull off, which reveals a deeper truth. Proximity is powerful. It can build great collaboration, but sometimes it also makes bad collaboration easier.

Remote Work Linked to a Decline in Financial Misconduct
Daniel Pink
1m 12s170 words~1 min read
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