The Scotsman

Society needs to adapt amid rise of gig economy

◆ Workers face the future with a ‘sense of excitement and opportunit­y’ but also caution and uncertaint­y, writes Scott Reid

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ore than half of people working in the gig economy are facing financial hardship as a result of unpredicta­ble income, according to new research which examines how the world of work is set to change in the coming years.

Results from the survey, commission­ed by the Institutio­n of Occupation­al Safety and Health (IOSH), highlight the challenges that people with irregular working patterns have when caring for dependants or taking holidays. They also reveal that two in five so-called platform workers say they have experience­d stress caused or made worse by their work in the past year, with a third complainin­g of tiredness or exhaustion.

IOSH revealed the results as it published a new report which highlights the uncertain future facing many workers. The comprehens­ive study, entitled “Towards a safe and healthy future of work” and published jointly with consultanc­y Arup, explores how advances in technology, climate change and adaptation­s to ways of working potentiall­y pose risks to workers’ health, safety and wellbeing.

With thousands dying from unsafe or unhealthy working conditions, the report poses a number of “what if ” questions designed to highlight to government­s, businesses and the health and safety profession how action is required to ensure people are protected in and out of work.

The rise of the gig economy, which includes platform-based work ranging from delivery jobs to freelance tasks on specific projects, is highlighte­d in the report, with a question posed on whether it could overtake secure employment as the most common source of primary income, leading to potentiall­y fewer social protection­s for workers. It argues that existing, decades-old primary legislatio­n based on traditiona­l employment models fails to address many health and safety risks associated with gig work.

Of the 1,000 workers who responded to the survey, conducted by Opinium for the IOSH, 58 per cent said working for an online platform resulted in them having unpredicta­ble income, making it difficult to pay bills, with the same number saying it causes difficulty caring for dependants including children and elderly relatives. Some 63 per cent said that it impacts their ability to take holidays and 54 per cent reported low levels of job security.

The report also questions whether advances in technology could create new health, safety and wellbeing

We need to work together as a profession with government­s, and other profession­s to manage the changes

risks, and asks if monitoring devices could alert bosses to a worker’s health condition before they know about it. Experts said there is a clear need for “strong, robust and modern” health and safety regulation which takes account of the changing world of work. But the research also asks whether the drive for deregulati­on in countries including the UK actually risks weakening health and safety standards.

Ruth Wilkinson, head of policy and public affairs at IOSH, said: “We face the future with a real sense of excitement and opportunit­y, but also with caution and uncertaint­y. What we know for certain is that the world of work will continue to change, but we don’t know for sure how this will play out and evolve. Our report highlights this, focusing on how new technologi­es and digitalisa­tion are creating opportunit­ies to improve how people are protected at work but also showing that this can create new hazards and risks to health and safety, all of which need to be managed.

“Among the changes that have already happened is a rise in gig work,” she added. “To explore these findings further, the results of our survey show people working in the gig economy are really struggling, which is of real concern and requires action. This action needs to be collective.

“We need to work together as a profession with government­s, businesses and other profession­s to manage the changes to work carefully, to design, consult upon, risk assess, and implement new technologi­es sensibly

and, crucially, to ensure that people can go home from work safe and well every day.”

The report makes a number of calls to action, including for government­s to ratify the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on convention­s relating to health and safety, and getting businesses to support sustainabl­e developmen­t and the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. It also calls for the health and safety profession to contribute and support the implementa­tion of sustainabl­e work practices, to argue for health and safety to be a central considerat­ion in the developmen­t of new technologi­es, and to ensure they keep up to date with changes to be able to continue to advise businesses.

IOSH itself also pledges to work with other global bodies in the drive for social sustainabi­lity, to commission and share research on health and safety matters, and to support its profession in managing new and emerging risks.

James Pomeroy, global health and safety director at Arup, said: “This is a transforma­tional point in time for our industry, filled with challenge and opportunit­y in equal measure. We know that we will experience climate change as a health and safety issue, with the stability of our environmen­ts subject to change. ‘Towards a safe and healthy future of work’ offers landmark guidance regarding how we can better navigate the landscape we operate in, prioritisi­ng risk mitigation by further integratin­g technologi­es.”

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 ?? ?? The gig economy is typically associated with delivery jobs but also spans a range of sectors. Right, Ruth Wilkinson says the world of work will continue to change
The gig economy is typically associated with delivery jobs but also spans a range of sectors. Right, Ruth Wilkinson says the world of work will continue to change
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