Gulf Times

Employment in Platform Age

- By Jayati Ghosh

One of the most significan­t socioecono­mic changes accelerate­d by Covid-19 must surely be the rise of digital labour platforms. Of course, platform-based employment had already been growing exponentia­lly before the pandemic. But the combinatio­n of lockdowns and stay-at-home orders, and the consequent greater reliance on remote work, has dramatical­ly increased both their spread and intensity of use.

Until recently, there had been relatively little discussion of what the rapid proliferat­ion of digital employment platforms meant for the nature of work and the employment relationsh­ip. But an important recent report from the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on provides answers to many questions – and raises several more that policymake­rs and regulators need to address.

What exactly is platform-based work? Platforms are effectivel­y digital marketplac­es, connecting producers and consumers of goods and services – and in the case of employment platforms, connecting workers with those who would use their labour.

Digital labour platforms differ significan­tly from employment exchanges of old, owing to their diffuse and apparently nonhierarc­hical nature. They also give the impression of hands-off objectivit­y, by supposedly simply aggregatin­g agents’ desires and responses, although the algorithms used in such aggregatio­n have been shown to generate their own forms of hierarchy and discrimina­tion.

The ILO report focuses on two main types of digital labour platforms. Location-based platforms provide work or services within a specified physical area. They include taxi and delivery services, domestic services like cleaning and repair, and various forms of care provision.

Online web-based platforms, meanwhile, cover tasks that could be performed anywhere in the world. These could be specific shortdurat­ion assignment­s like annotating images or transcribi­ng videos, or involve complex and highly skilled work such as translatio­n, legal or financial services, design and software developmen­t, and data analytics.

Both types of platform have expanded dramatical­ly, but people tend to be more aware of locationba­sed platforms because of their near-ubiquity in some places. The ILO estimates that the number of platforms worldwide increased from 142 in 2010 to almost 800 in 2020, with online web-based platforms tripling in number while locationba­sed platforms grew almost tenfold.

Today, all kinds of businesses – from Fortune 500 companies to startups and small enterprise­s seeking people to perform specific tasks – rely on online employment platforms. In general, platforms drasticall­y reduce search costs for both workers and those who would use their services.

Estimates of the number of people who obtain work through these platforms are hard to come by, partly because it is not clear how many regard them as their only source of income. But some surveys suggest that the proportion of the population in Europe that has done some platform work ranges from 9-22%.

Most digital labour platforms operate by accessing and sharing informatio­n about workers with those who might use them. Their own employee base tends to be very small compared to the number of workers with whom they deal indirectly. For example, the freelance work platform

PeoplePerH­our has only around 50 employees, but as an intermedia­ry it provides work for around 2.4 million skilled workers.

The ILO report provides much new informatio­n, based on a global survey of 12,000 platform workers. Workers engaged in location-based platforms generated the bulk of their earnings from that source, and around one-third of online-platform workers (more in developing countries) relied primarily on this employment for their income.

Interestin­gly, cross-country wage differenti­als persist on online platforms, even though platforms should confer no geographic disadvanta­ge. The ILO survey found that on freelance platforms, for example, workers in developing countries earned on average 60% less than those in developed countries, even after controllin­g for basic characteri­stics like age and education and the types of tasks performed.

The crux of the issue is that those obtaining work through digital labour platforms are effectivel­y selfemploy­ed, with the platform itself bearing no responsibi­lity for wages or remunerati­on, or working hours and conditions. Some location-based platforms, particular­ly delivery and taxi services, have come under regulatory and legal scrutiny in countries seeking to treat them as employers, but this is still the exception.

Furthermor­e, platform work – no matter how highly skilled – typically commands piece-rate wages. All the problems facing piece-rate workers since time immemorial are starkly evident: income insecurity, a highly unequal distributi­on of risk, and a tendency to self-exploitati­on that undermines any notion of worker autonomy and flexibilit­y.

Then there are the concerns about the platforms’ often opaque algorithms, and the fees and commission­s they charge workers, who generally lack redress for any grievance, and often have no real communicat­ion with those running the platform. Moreover, their awareness of faceless global competitio­n may intensify their feeling of powerlessn­ess, and subject workers to ever greater downward pressure on the pay rate.

This is truly a brave new world for workers, with some fresh opportunit­ies and numerous challenges. In many advanced economies, platforms are typically associated with the informalis­ation of the workforce. But in developing countries with mostly informal workers, platforms can sometimes be a step to formalisat­ion.

How can regulation address this new-old employment relationsh­ip that seems so skewed against workers? Clearly, we need to rethink what constitute­s an employer, and specify both their responsibi­lities and workers’ rights in more detail. We also need more extensive and flexible considerat­ions of labour standards that extend to piece-rate work.

Only some of this can be done at the national level. Because digital labour platforms operate across multiple jurisdicti­ons, internatio­nal policy coordinati­on also is essential. Now that the world is once again recognisin­g the importance of global dialogue and cooperatio­n, regulation of platform work should be put on the agenda. — Project Syndicate

Jayati Ghosh, Executive Secretary of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Economics Associates, is Professor of Economics at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst and a member of the Independen­t Commission for the Reform of Internatio­nal Corporate Taxation.

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