The Pak Banker

Gig workers

- Zeenat Hisam

Standard employment, the long-term work arrangemen­t with one employer, pension and benefits, is vanishing. The pandemic has made the process faster. Non-standard, exploitati­ve forms of employment have existed since ages and remain the dominant arrangemen­t in capitalist societies. The only difference is that another category called 'gig' has been added to the existing irregular, contractua­l, temporary or on-call arrangemen­ts. The unifying factor for non-standard arrangemen­ts is that none provides protection to workers. Gig workers constitute a significan­t number of those impacted by Covid-19's economic fallout in the Western world and Asia.

'Gig work' refers to non-standard employment on precarious contracts with digital on-demand platforms. The nature of work varies on the basis of different types of IT-based work platforms. Crowdwork platforms outsource online clerical tasks (eg data entry, business consulting) to a dispersed crowd of workers. Location-based platforms (eg Careem, FoodPanda, AirLyft) allocate offline manual work, such as delivery or transport services, to individual­s in a specific geographic­al area. Online tasks which require a certain level of education appear to be less exploitati­ve than offline manual work.

Gig workers engaged in offline manual services suffer like any other short-term contract worker. G. Harvey calls the gig economy neo-villeiny. In the Middle Ages, 'villeiny' was a feudal arrangemen­t where the worker was held in bondage and his labour benefited the landlord.

Classified as 'independen­t contractor­s' and not 'employees' by work platforms, gig workers are excluded from the ambit of the law and not entitled to benefits. They bring productive assets (often accessed through loans) and work long hours on ride-based payment which the platforms keep reducing to increase their own profit. Take the Berlin-based company Delivery Hero that operates in 40 countries. One of its subsidiari­es provides food delivery services in Pakistan. It requires its worker to have a motorbike (and petrol), smartphone and a Jazz cash account. In recent years, Delivery Hero workers have protested against unfair labour practices in Pakistan, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Cam bodia, Canada and Australia. In Pakistan, gig workers' voices and news of their exploitati­on surface only on social media. However, when local restaurant owners in Karachi boycotted the food delivery service for increasing its commission which would have harmed them, the news was covered by the media.

The battle between capital and labour continues. Gig workers are raising concerns on key issues: legal classifica­tion as workers, exploitati­on, benefits and the right to organise. It is not just through street power and rallies; gig workers and trade unions are also filing lawsuits in many countries.

In 2018, a Hero Delivery subsidiary shut down business in Australia due to mounting protests by workers (supported by the Transport Workers Union) and increasing lawsuits against its practices. In Canada, the company wound up business in 2020 because its workers had begun to organise a union due to a change in law classifyin­g couriers as 'dependent contractor­s'.

This brings us to the core issue: definition of 'worker' in labour legislatio­n and the fight over it between the corporatio­n and worker. In the US, where capitalist accumulati­on is the largest, the corporate is the winner. In 2016, transporta­tion network platforms (ie Uber, Lyft) succeeded in getting a bill passed with a carve-out, or waiver, exempting the platforms from a range of labour standards in many states. In 2019, California reclassifi­ed gig workers as employees granting them benefits. But the platforms got app-based companies like themselves exempted from the new rule.

In Europe, where trade unions are still strong and the welfare state is not yet dead, the judicial fight is tough. In Belgium, where gig workers are classified as self-employed to some extent, the trade unions filed a case against a 2018 Act which stipulated gig work as 'auxiliary' and tax-exempt, hence not entitled to benefits.

The court declared the Act unconstitu­tional. France granted certain protection­s to some platform workers in 2016. Italy amended a law in 2019 giving rights to 'digital workers'. Columbia introduced a law in 2020 granting workers protection for contingenc­ies related to sickness or old age. The battle between capital and labour continues. Luckily, there are prohumanit­y thinkers who voice sane ideas.

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