CHRISTINA WOCINTECHCHAT-UNSPLASH

CEOs frustrated that workers aren鈥檛 coming into the office more often are trying a new tactic: tying in-person attendance directly to higher pay.

At least one big law firm has office presence to employee bonuses. At other companies, the connection is more tacit. Google recently said it would in performance reviews; executives didn鈥檛 have to spell out that these ratings influence compensation. Nor did IBM Chief Executive Officer Arvind Krishna need to explain what he meant when he said 鈥溾 if you work remotely; if it鈥檚 harder to get a promotion, it鈥檚 naturally going to be harder to get a raise.

Leaders who want to experiment with this approach should proceed carefully. A compensation disparity hits differently when framed as a penalty for remote workers than as a bonus for commuters. And a clear policy is likely to work better than vague insinuations.

Some bonus for regular in-person attendance actually seems reasonable. Commuting is time-consuming, and something most people find unpleasant. It鈥檚 expensive, and not only because of the price of parking or train tickets 鈥 if you can鈥檛 be home in time to pick up your kid from day care, you鈥檒l have to hire someone to do it. If you don鈥檛 have time to cook, you鈥檒l have to get takeout. The costs add up.

And a last year by Jose Maria Barrero, an economist, and several collaborators suggested that remote work lessened wage-growth pressures because workers value it so highly. As my colleague Jonathan Levin at the time, 鈥渞emote work has an 鈥榓menity value,鈥 much like a company car or an office gym.鈥 Clawing back that amenity could be expensive: A survey of London workers conducted by Bloomberg Intelligence earlier this year found that employers would need to to lure people back to offices five days a week.

But the recent crop of CEO comments tying pay to office presence aren鈥檛 framing remote work as an amenity. They鈥檙e calling it a performance problem for which remote workers should be financially penalized. And that suddenly makes it less palatable.

Some of this is basic loss aversion, the psychological principle that bad is stronger than good. If you find $20, you鈥檒l be mildly pleased. But if you lose $20, you鈥檒l be seriously annoyed.

But there鈥檚 more going on here. There are questions of fairness. have shown remote workers are more productive. Shouldn鈥檛 workers be paid for their output? Not to mention that polls have consistently shown a preference for remote work among groups at greater risk of discrimination, such as women, older workers, people of color, and the disabled.

Yet paying for face time, rather than output, is a practice companies have long used. It鈥檚 part of the reason that men earn more than women do 鈥 on average, men tend to report spending longer hours working. Women 鈥 especially mothers 鈥 generally report less, because they do more unpaid labor at home.

To be clear, people who log more hours don鈥檛 necessarily get more done. But many managers have overlooked that detail. A pre-pandemic of consultants showed that people who pretended to work long hours were rated highly by their bosses, regardless of their output. Employees who were honest about working 鈥渙nly鈥 full time were penalized 鈥 even though they churned out just as much work.

This is why, for years, workers have used tricks to give the appearance of putting in more time than they are 鈥 leaving a jacket on the back of their desk chair, for example, or scheduling e-mails to send at odd hours. (Don鈥檛 pretend you鈥檝e never been tempted.)

Many attempts to cut through the politicking and reward employees for their actual output 鈥 such as Best Buy鈥檚 鈥 鈥 have sputtered.

This isn鈥檛 to say that all remote workers are more productive 鈥 or that there鈥檚 no reason beyond company politics to show up in person. As pro-office executives are often quick to argue, even if remote employees write more lines of code or create more PowerPoints, that鈥檚 not the only way to create value. Mentoring, collaborating, contributing to a positive company culture 鈥 these create value, too. And most are in person than remotely.

But Barrero points out that although remote and in-person workers might be contributing in different ways, it would be hard to say which type of worker contributes more value overall. Moreover, he warns, in-office workers aren鈥檛 necessarily working all the time they鈥檙e present, even if that鈥檚 what managers assume: Recent has found that, during working hours, in-office workers were more likely than remote workers to play computer games.

鈥淭he key is to think about why you want the employees to be in the office,鈥 Barrero told me. 鈥淎n extra day in the office where they would be doing the exact same thing at home just seems like capriciousness.鈥

Indeed. But whoever said companies were entirely rational?

If companies want to financially reward employees who take the trouble to come into the office more frequently, they should be explicit about it: Come in X many times, get Y amount of extra money. Then workers can decide if juice is worth the squeeze. And executives will have to be honest about the bottom-line value of an occupied seat.

BLOOMBERG OPINION