NYTimes | The
promises Silicon Valley makes about the gig economy can sound
appealing. Its digital technology lets workers become entrepreneurs, we
are told, freed from the drudgery of 9-to-5 jobs. Students, parents and
others can make extra cash in their free time while pursuing their
passions, maybe starting a thriving small business.
In
reality, there is no utopia at companies like Uber, Lyft, Instacart and
Handy, whose workers are often manipulated into working long hours for
low wages while continually chasing the next ride or task. These
companies have discovered they can harness advances in software and
behavioral sciences to old-fashioned worker exploitation, according to a
growing body of evidence, because employees lack the basic protections
of American law.
A recent story in The Times
by Noam Scheiber vividly described how Uber and other companies use
tactics developed by the video game industry to keep drivers on the road
when they would prefer to call it a day, raising company revenue while
lowering drivers’ per-hour earnings. One Florida driver told The Times
he earned less than $20,000 a year before expenses like gas and
maintenance. In New York City, an Uber drivers group affiliated with the
machinists union said that more than one-fifth of its members earn less
than $30,000 before expenses.
Gig economy workers tend to be poorer and are more likely to be minorities than the population at large, a survey by the Pew Research Center
found last year. Compared with the population as a whole, almost twice
as many of them earned under $30,000 a year, and 40 percent were black
or Hispanic, compared with 27 percent of all American adults. Most said
the money they earned from online platforms was essential or important
to their families.
Since
workers for most gig economy companies are considered independent
contractors, not employees, they do not qualify for basic protections
like overtime pay and minimum wages. This helped Uber, which started in
2009, quickly grow to 700,000 active drivers in the United States,
nearly three times the number of taxi drivers and chauffeurs in the
country in 2014.
0 comments:
Post a Comment