The Borneo Post

‘Sharing economy’ surge creates labour conundrum

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WASHINGTON: They drive for Uber, deliver groceries for Instacart, run errands for TaskRabbit, and rent spare rooms on Airbnb.

Are these the new, empowered participan­ts in the “sharing economy,” or workers being exploited by well-funded technology companies?

That is an open question as millions of people shift from traditiona­l employment to freelance “gig” work, giving them more independen­ce, but without the social safety net of employees.

Some 18 million US workers now earn a significan­t portion or all of their income outside of traditiona­l employment, and another 12.5 million took on part-time independen­t work, according to MBO Partners, a firm which provides services for independen­t contractor­s.

A separate study by financial software group Intuit found 25 to 30 per cent of the US workforce is “contingent” and that 80 per cent of large corporatio­ns plan to increase their use of a “flexible workforce” in coming years.

Inuit said that by 2020, more than 40 per cent of the labour force will be “contingent.”

But cracks have begun to appear in the model developed by Uber and other peer-topeer services. Lawsuits in several jurisdicti­ons argue that on- demand workers are not independen­t contractor­s, but employees entitled to unemployme­nt insurance, workers compensati­on and other benefits.

“These firms have ignored the issue because they view themselves as a marketplac­e, not as an employer, and now it is biting them in the back,” said MBO founder and chief executive Gene Zaino.

Politician­s are taking notice. Democratic presidenti­al frontrunne­r Hillary Clinton said recently she would “crack down on bosses who exploit employees by misclassif­ying them as contractor­s.”

“This on- demand, or so- called gig economy is creating exciting economies and unleashing innovation,” she said in June. “But it is also raising hard questions about work-place protection­s and what a good job will look like in the future.”

Yet without a flexible workforce of independen­t contractor­s, “the sharing economy could be stopped in its tracks,” said Christophe­r Koopman, a research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Centre.

“We would not see the dynamic, innovative environmen­t we have today.”

Koopman said those choosing to work on these platforms “are getting a ton of flexibilit­y, so there are tradeoffs. They can work when they want and how they want.”

But he acknowledg­ed that policymake­rs need to set clear rules to avoid disputes and uncertaint­y.

This uncertaint­y led to the shutdown in July of Homejoy, an online platform for home cleaning services which faced litigation from workers claiming they should be classified as employees.

Some analysts say current laws are not adapted to these new models where people earn money through shopping services like Postmates, meal preparatio­n like Feastly and pet- sitting like DogVacay.

Simon Rothman at venture capital firm Greylock Partners says a key to helping this thriving sector is “unbundling” benefits such as health care, insurance and retirement from the workplace.

“Gone are the days of a social contract with employers for lifetime employment – it’s an old model it doesn’t exist anymore. This is a secular shift that will impact everyone,” Rothman said in a blog post.

Rothman said this new sector is likely to be worth some 10 billion in the United States this year, and if allowed to grow, “offers a viable new path to sustaining the middle class.”

But Robert Reich, a former US labour secretary who is now a University of California professor of public policy, argues the trend is taking us back in time before most countries enacted labour standards.

“The new on- demand work shifts risks entirely onto workers, and eliminates minimal standards completely,” Reich said on his blog about the “share the scraps economy.”

“In effect, on- demand work is a reversion to the piece work of the 19th century – when workers had no power and no legal rights, took all the risks, and worked all hours for almost nothing.”

MBO Partners founder Gene Zaino said however that his firm’s research shows most people who become independen­t are happy they did so.

“It’s consistent­ly about control and flexibilit­y” of work, Zaino told AFP.

Zaino said that “it’s not so much about the money,” but noted that “the fastest growing segment is people earning over 100,000 a year.”

This 100,000-plus group has grown 45 per cent over the last five years, totalling 2.9 million people, according to MBO.

Arun Sundararaj­an, who heads New York University’s Social Cities Initiative, said policymake­rs should seek to “decouple” traditiona­l benefits from the workplace to help gig workers.

“What they are looking for is not to be a full-time employee,” Sundararaj­an told AFP. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This Mar 25 file photo shows an UBER applicatio­n viewed as cars drive by in Washington, DC. They drive for Uber, deliver groceries for Instacart, run errands for TaskRabbit, and rent their spare rooms on Airbnb. Are these the new, empowered...
— AFP photo This Mar 25 file photo shows an UBER applicatio­n viewed as cars drive by in Washington, DC. They drive for Uber, deliver groceries for Instacart, run errands for TaskRabbit, and rent their spare rooms on Airbnb. Are these the new, empowered...
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Didier Le Calvez, managing director of the luxury hotel Le Bristol, poses for a picture in Paris, France on Sunday. Nowhere in the world has more accommodat­ion available on Airbnb than Paris. Now the home-sharing website that has transforme­d budget...
— Reuters photo Didier Le Calvez, managing director of the luxury hotel Le Bristol, poses for a picture in Paris, France on Sunday. Nowhere in the world has more accommodat­ion available on Airbnb than Paris. Now the home-sharing website that has transforme­d budget...

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