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Government Democrats

Biden Administration To Unveil Contractor Rule Set To Upend Gig Economy (reuters.com) 213

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden will release a final rule as soon as this week that will make it more difficult for companies to treat workers as independent contractors rather than employees that typically cost a company more, an administration official said. The U.S. Department of Labor rule, which was first proposed in 2022 and is likely to face legal challenges, will require that workers be considered employees entitled to more benefits and legal protections than contractors when they are "economically dependent" on a company.

A range of industries will likely be affected by the rule, which will take effect later this year, but its potential impact on app-based services that rely heavily on contract workers has garnered the most attention. Shares of Uber, Lyft and DoorDash all tumbled at least 10% when the draft rule was proposed in October 2022. The rule is among regulations with the most far-reaching impacts issued by the Labor Department office that enforces U.S. wage laws, according to Marc Freedman, vice president at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest U.S. business lobby. But he said the draft version of the rule provides little guidance to companies on where to draw the line between employees and contractors. "Economic dependence is an elusive concept that in some cases may end up being defined by the eyes of the beholder," Freedman said.

The Labor Department in the proposed rule said it would consider factors such as a worker's "opportunity for profit or loss, investment, permanency, the degree of control by the employer over the worker, (and) whether the work is an integral part of the employer's business." The rule replaces a Trump administration regulation that said workers who own their own businesses or have the ability to work for competing companies, such as a driver who works for Uber and Lyft, can be treated as contractors. [...] The Biden administration has said the Trump-era rule violated U.S. wage laws and was out of step with decades of federal court decisions, and worker advocates have said a more strict standard was necessary to combat the rampant misclassification of workers in some industries.

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Biden Administration To Unveil Contractor Rule Set To Upend Gig Economy

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  • by Tyr07 ( 8900565 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @03:40PM (#64141883)

    An actual article involving the current potus that relating to policy to get peoples attention instead of 'He who shall not be named' is bad to distract from bad policies.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @03:41PM (#64141885)
    working as "contractors" doing day to day operations and support work. It's bad news all around and reduces pay. This isn't the glory days of the 90s and early 2000s when you worked as a "contractor" so you could pocket the cost of your health premiums by skipping health insurance in your 20s. These were full time jobs the company required for day to day operations being made into contractor positions to get out of paying unemployment insurance premiums and to evade laws about mass layoffs.

    All that before we talk about how Uber & Lyft wouldn't have a company without those "independent" contractors. Or how they'll cheerfully lock you out of the app if you fall below 4 stars or if you don't take one fares that aren't profitable.
    • the US does need better labor laws and staffing firms some times are used to get out giving workers stuff like paid time off or sick day pay.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by lsllll ( 830002 )
      Didn't know if I should spend my 12 mod points modding anti-contractors' posts down or if I should comment instead, but having been a contractor for the past 28 years I have a vested interest and figured I'd throw in my $0.02.

      What I do get from the anti-contractors' views is that it feels like companies are taking advantage of the work force. Maybe they are of some workers. But what I don't get that we live in a free society and nobody's forced into working as a contractor. I have been offered full-ti
      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @04:34PM (#64142097)
        There have been drastic changes over the last 28 years that you're not going to notice because you are already established in your career.

        One of the dirty little tricks that gets used and has been for some time is that new employees are treated significantly worse than older employees even for contractor work. Companies know that they can abuse younger workers and they do it even at a large corporate level.

        This is why you can have a situation where my kid works in the same field as there grandparents but makes about half the money adjusted for inflation.

        When I pointed that out and how fucked up it was to my kid they argued against it because they felt they didn't have enough experience even though they had just been through a 4-year program 12 months of which was raw on the job training. Meanwhile neither of their grandparents had anything more than a high school diploma...

        This is how wages are statistically flat even though pay is much lower.
        • One of the dirty little tricks that gets used and has been for some time is that new employees are treated significantly worse than older employees even for contractor work.

          Tell that to one of my friends who was salaried with an on-call bonus for weekends, then they took the bonus away but kept the on-call work. IT companies treat the middle aged employees just as bad as the young ones. The only difference is that younger folks think this sort of thing is normal.

        • There have been drastic changes over the last 28 years that you're not going to notice because you are already established in your career.

          One of the dirty little tricks that gets used and has been for some time is that new employees are treated significantly worse than older employees even for contractor work. Companies know that they can abuse younger workers and they do it even at a large corporate level.

          First you imply this is a new thing but then admit that it's been going on "for some time". And you mix up "new" employees with "younger". What you are describing has been going on a lot longer than "28 years", I can personally vouch for 45. And I'd bet money it's gone on for much longer than that.

          This is why you can have a situation where my kid works in the same field as there grandparents but makes about half the money adjusted for inflation.

          That's because when their grandparents entered the field it was "new" and the number of people available was minimal. I started with punch cards. 5 years later I was making "crazy money" just because I knew ho

        • by bjwest ( 14070 )

          This is why you can have a situation where my kid works in the same field as there grandparents but makes about half the money adjusted for inflation.

          So you're saying you don't believe employees should get periodic raises based on performance and/or seniority? Or do you think that raises should be across the board, disregarding the employee's status or performance? Do you think an employee who started just the day before should get a 10% raise just because one person has been working there for 5 years is getting it, or even be at the same pay level on the first day as the employee who's about to retire after 40 years at the company? Entry level jobs a

      • by GlennC ( 96879 )

        They make okay money until their car breaks down or needs maintenance.
        I learned that lesson the hard way after the water pump went out in the car I used to drive for Uber in.

        As for your other point, you must be lucky that you haven't been taken advantage of...yet.
        It will happen, and when it does it won't be easy.

        • by postbigbang ( 761081 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @05:56PM (#64142355)

          There's another problem, just twenty years down the road when the Social Security Administration looks at their ten best years of their wages where withholding was made... and find nothing.

          These people will be driving and doing gigs until they *die* and won't be able to retire and have any sort of earn-in to a pension. They'll become dependent on the state and/or charity for any aid, any medical care, etc. This is going to get serious as a burden on society, and pretty soon.

          • by lsllll ( 830002 )

            There's another problem, just twenty years down the road when the Social Security Administration looks at their ten best years of their wages where withholding was made... and find nothing.

            That doesn't make sense. I am a contractor, but work under my own corporation's hat. Under my corporation, I have to quarterly file form 941 with the IRS. On that form, you actually mark the amounts you paid to the government for SS. If those calculations aren't right, then you can bet your ass that the IRS will be after you. If you're a 1099 worker, you have to file things yourself, but the IRS will still come after you if you don't pay SS. Now, if you're supposed to file with the IRS and you're not

      • But what I don't get that we live in a free society and nobody's forced into working as a contractor.

        Look at the cost of housing and groceries lately and tell me with a straight face that people aren't truly being forced into doing whatever shitty hustle helps them get closer to making ends meet.

        Being a contractor should mean that you're an independent business owner, not an employee getting the shaft because some greedy company stuck that label on their form of employment. One of the defining characteristics of being a contractor is that you set your own pricing for your goods and/or services. Funny how

        • by lsllll ( 830002 )
          The cost of living not being on par with wages is a much more complex problem than an easy blame on gig economy. Look at any graph comparing cost of living vs. wages, both adjusted to today's dollars, and you'll see that our problem started in the early 70s, but the gig economy concept is just a little over a decade old. The issue with what Biden is doing here is that it's just a very small bandaid and it doesn't address the real issue. To protect workers in America, you need comprehensive labor reform t
        • by cstacy ( 534252 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @08:06PM (#64142693)

          Being a contractor should mean that you're an independent business owner, not an employee getting the shaft because some greedy company stuck that label on their form of employment. One of the defining characteristics of being a contractor is that you set your own pricing for your goods and/or services. Funny how all these "gig economy" jobs don't let you do that.

          It can be done. There's a new rideshare gig company called Empower that legitimately treats drivers as contractors.

          It's just like the Uber/Lyft apps, except that the drivers dynamically set their own individual fares, and are not manipulated by the algorithm (they really can decide when and where they drive and which jobs to take/decline, etc).

          The cost to riders is (in my experience, slightly) cheaper than with Uber. Like Uber, the rider knows up-front what the fare will be.

          Instead of the company taking a huge cut of the fare, the driver gets the entire amount. The driver pays a fixed subscription fee for the dispatch service.

          The drivers are background-checked and insured and the vehicles are just as nice. Empower has the same range of vehicle class choices, but also has features that the other "ride share" services do not. For example, you can request favorite drivers if you have ones you like. You can request a same-gender driver.

          Empower drivers say that they make twice as much as on Uber/Lyft. According to the latest subscription plan information I just now looked up, that appears to be true. (There's a tiered plan based on the driver's earnings, and the percentages are at least twice as good as what Uber would have taken.)

          I probably sound like a commercial for Empower, but I'm just a rider. I live in the suburbs of a major metro area (D.C.) well-served by Uber and Lyft. Unable to drive in must-drive place, I am forced to take a lot of Ubers. I have found that I can get an Empower ride just as quickly, even though Empower is a new and much smaller operation. I've only done it a few times so far, and the fare was slightly better than Uber.

          I have posted many times in flaming detail about how despicable Uber takes advantage of their drivers, and how most of them only mistakenly think they are "making money" (because they do not understand their true costs of operation). I don't know if Empower drivers are as clueless, but at least they are really contractors, can control their business, and have a more obviously fixed cost for one component of their overhead. And better rates.

          I guess we'll see if Empower or anyone can get anywhere in the face of the Uber-company, and how the latter will react in these changing competitive environments.

      • There is nothing wrong with being a contractor, if you are fairly compensated for it. The problem is when being a contractor is forced on you because your circumstances. Employment law is their to protect the vulnerable and companies simply calling you an employee so they can get away with getting around those laws should not be allowed.

        Note: I am not in the US.

        When I was a contractor I was paid well and treated fairly. However I see contractors on the lower end getting paid minimum wage, loosing their job

      • ...or in other words, "My personal work preferences are more important than the well-being & rights of millions of gig workers."
        • by lsllll ( 830002 )
          You're talking about upending the nature of contract work (which is probably something that goes back to a few thousand years) in favor of the government controlling relationships between companies and workers or even individuals. Are you prepared for that?
          • No, I'm not. I'm talking about the government doing its job & protecting workers from abuses by employers using "contract work" as an excuse. They're not talking about ending all contract work.

            BTW, you're using the "but this is the way we've always done it" excuse, which isn't a valid argument against something that's clearly wrong.
    • I think the challenge in trying to define it is that there are true independent contractors who have their own business but service primarily one client at a time, then there are the "staffing agencies" who are employer-of-record but not employer-in-fact... then there are gig workers who likely fall into different categories themselves.

      Solving or modernizing the gig worker issue to me is lowest priority; most of the people I know or meet are comfortable with their current arrangement. True independent contr

      • Yeah I refuse to do agency work. I cant stand the concept of them. I've had a situation earlier in my career where I was earning barely more than graduate wages, and then learned the agency was being paid more than twice what was being passed on (And thats not including taxes). For what? They lined me up an interview.

        I resigned on the spot when I found that out.... and the end client company was just as horrified as I was at how little I was being paid compared to what they where paying, then hired me on as

    • Yeah and it has really rotten effects on workers long term security too. I worked as a "contractor" for years until I went to the bank to try and secure a mortgage for a new house and the bank outright refused to loan me money even though I was earning nearly 40% more the cited income required for the loan. The reason was simple;- If I'm a contractor I dont have the job security required to guarantee I'll continue to be able to pay off the loan. This has *insidious* implications, because it forced me to kee

      • Yeah and it has really rotten effects on workers long term security too. I worked as a "contractor" for years until I went to the bank to try and secure a mortgage for a new house and the bank outright refused to loan me money even though I was earning nearly 40% more the cited income required for the loan. The reason was simple;- If I'm a contractor I dont have the job security required to guarantee I'll continue to be able to pay off the loan. This has *insidious* implications, because it forced me to kee

  • Expect gig economy companies to require new hires to sign a waiver stating that the gig is a part-time activity to earn a bit of extra cash but not their primary activity they depend on to pay the bills.

    Everybody who's "economically dependent" on them will naturally sign because they need to work. Just like everybody who needs to use Microsoft products professionally have been agreeing to outrageous EULAs for decades and can't refuse the lopsided terms because they need to work.

    In short: nice gesture, but

    • It's a shot across the bow. So I like Joe Biden but at the end of the day he is a Clinton era neoliberal. This means he doesn't take immediate decisive action the way a lot of people further on the left want. He is very careful like all neoliberals not to make too much trouble or to risk broader economic problems. In short he's a conservative in the true sense of the word. But I would call a left-wing conservative.

      This is Joe Biden telling the gig economy to knock at the fuck off and to stop abusing th
  • Cue the cranks (Score:3, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @03:46PM (#64141907) Journal

    Cue the cranks, and by "cranks" I mean the Republicans who will do their utmost to spin this as some horrible affront to workers or the American way or the fabric of spacetime or whatever stupid fucking shit they're wetting themselves about this week.

    FACT: This is good for workers and good for the country. That means that Republicans will characterize it as the worst thing ever. You'll see. Just like when they said the unemployment rate was "too low" and might be "bad for America". Also like when they downplayed the stock market's recent record high, and said it "could put America at risk."

     

    • by poptix ( 78287 )

      Blaming a political party means you've already drank the kool-aid.

      This is more presidential ruling by fiat while congress is too busy on social media to do any real work.

      • Blaming a political party means you've already drank the kool-aid.

        Right, because political parties are blameless, they never do anything wrong.

        • by poptix ( 78287 )

          They're both responsible. Pitting us against each other is how they maintain control.

    • ... unemployment rate was "too low" and might be "bad for America".

      It is: It means employers can no longer control wages. In the 1970s, that lead to stagflation and sympathy-union strikes.

      Today, is different: Employers have been controlling wages too much and (capitalist) economic responses are faulty.

      What Republicans really mean is, they don't want the usual mechanisms for labour redistribution (re-training, job-hopping, unionization) to occur. So, low unemployment is bad, yes, and they don't want higher wages, or labour redistribution.

      Which is why this year suf

  • driving jobs should pay full irs rate + TOLLS + parking fees.
    And they should pay miles round trip. Say you an UBER working the airport you should get the full miles for the trip and then the miles to get back to the airport waiting zone.

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      driving jobs should pay full irs rate + TOLLS + parking fees.
      And they should pay miles round trip. Say you an UBER working the airport you should get the full miles for the trip and then the miles to get back to the airport waiting zone.

      See my post about "Empower".

  • ban tip baiting and make so that tips can not be cut after the job is done.

    • Tip with cash then.
      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        That's fine, it also eliminates tip baiting.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        Tip with cash then.

        Workers tipped in cash are required to empty their pockets and hand over anything they got to the employer, who then decides how much (if any) of it they get to keep. A common practice is to pool all the tip money together and divide it among all the workers, including those who you don't interact with. Or the manager can just keep it. Is this legal? Mostly.

    • Remove tipping altogether. Pay bonuses and or other incentives for high customer ratings. Set prices accordingly. It works in other parts of the world.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

      Just get rid of tipping completely.

      Why should I tip a driver before they've done their job and I have no clue the quality they'll provide? They can drop the food off in the wrong spot and pocket the tip. Why should my tip be a percentage of my total? It doesn't matter if I ordered $15 of food from Taco Bell or $50, the driver is doing the same amount of work. The entirety of tipping culture is awful and toxic. People think they deserve tips when they don't. People think it's appropriate to tip when it's not

      • by Xenx ( 2211586 )

        It doesn't matter if I ordered $15 of food from Taco Bell or $50, the driver is doing the same amount of work.

        I just want to point out the flaw in this. Bigger order equals more work. However, in terms of effort it's a not a linear increase. The bigger problem here, and goes along with your overall point to get rid of tipping, is that to get reliable and quick service it sorta becomes the opposite. You "need" to tip a higher percentage on the smaller order to offset the crap pay they get. Effectively, as long as their crap pay and tip equal a reasonable amount it'll work out.

        • by cstacy ( 534252 )

          It doesn't matter if I ordered $15 of food from Taco Bell or $50, the driver is doing the same amount of work.

          I just want to point out the flaw in this. Bigger order equals more work.

          Except when it doesn't.
          Like in this example.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        Just get rid of tipping completely.

        Why should I tip a driver before they've done their job and I have no clue the quality they'll provide?

        For "ride share", you do not tip ahead; you tip afterwards, if you feel like it. In the few places where the government has deemed the drivers to be employees who must be paid minimum wage, it is questionable whether one need tip at all -- because what you're paying up front is dramatically higher than before. That all makes sense.

        What does not make sense is tipping before services are rendered. Yesterday the grocery delivery driver came well before the scheduled window. He's supposed to take the groceries

  • I guess these "gig" companies will simply need to do what so many other industries already do, hire a middleman.

    The middleman (i.e. staffing firm/temp agency) is a company who hires "workers" so the "gig" company can easily scale down or up and reduce employee cost and associated risks. The middleman company's provided workers will likely be regulated by an entirely different set of rules, because they are not technically employees of the "gig" company.

    I'll take half of what ever Uber etc. is paying their

    • OR just form their own?

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      I guess these "gig" companies will simply need to do what so many other industries already do, hire a middleman.

      The middleman (i.e. staffing firm/temp agency) is a company who hires "workers" so the "gig" company can easily scale down or up and reduce employee cost and associated risks. The middleman company's provided workers will likely be regulated by an entirely different set of rules, because they are not technically employees of the "gig" company.

      I'll take half of what ever Uber etc. is paying their lawyers and MBAs for that little gem.

      They're not that dumb.
      There are middleman companies already.
      That's not how they (are allowed to) work.

      Go ask for your money back from wherever you got your JD and MBA online.

  • by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @04:29PM (#64142073)

    Life as an independent contractor can be $250/hr (or more) and a lot of hours. Coding ERP integration, custom reports, fixing database problems, tracing down and fixing out of balance accounts for the monthly close, integrations with everything everywhere, business modeling and projections, etc. If you force them to become employees, there is no way they will make anywhere near that much. In many cases, the company paying dictates a lot about what is done and how. You often must use the company's computers and cloud services (for all sorts of security reasons)

    For "economically dependent"
    A) opportunity for profit or loss (Contractors can't really lose money. At $250 and hour, this is a sure thing unless there is no work)
    B) investment (Minimal. Nice shirts? Business cards? I assume the CPA earned years ago and degree from MIT doesn't count here)
    C) permanency (Client tend to keep coming back, projects always drag on)
    D) the degree of control by the employer over the worker (You have to follow the client's rules. You might be required to work at their location.)
    E) (and) whether the work is an integral part of the employer's business. (I'd call accounting and ERP as core. Walmart is more IT supply chain than anything else. If you can't run this stuff efficiently and effectively, you go bankrupt.)

    Watch unforeseen consequences and "Gee, I thought the law was meant for..."

    • by drhamad ( 868567 )
      That's basically the point though... if you're economically dependent on a single company to bring in the majority of your work, you aren't a contractor. You are an employee. Your CPA example... a typical CPA has hundreds of clients. He's not dependent on any one of them. If he's really just a CPA for IBM or whatever, he's not a contractor, he's an employee.
      • The problem is employer choice vs "employee" choice. Some roles are not full time, but can pay quite well for ~20 hours a week or 40 hours a month. Having multiple part-time W2 jobs takes power away from the contractor.

        I get the issue with tax avoidance for someone that doesn't have overhead and profit baked into their rates, but taxation should not be the primary concern in classification; it is a separate issue that you need to figure out.

    • unforeseen consequences may happen but low end abuse has gone to far and some of that also happens at non low level jobs with BS like.
      Must rent our hardware / software / truck / desk.
      Must work our hours.
      Must come to our work party but you are not allowed to bill for that time.
      Must take our classes and tests.
      Must rent our office.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @04:44PM (#64142133)
      And I hire a CPA that's fine because I build fences. It's also fine if I hire somebody to do it consulting to make a website for me to sell my fences.

      It is not fine if I'm a CPA and rather than hire employees to do extra taxes I pretend they're contractors. The line is pretty obvious I don't have a CPA Business without accountants so I don't get to hire a accountants and pretend their contractors. The same is true if I'm a software development company and instead of hiring the programmers that make my software I turn them into contractors. Again the line is pretty obvious just ask yourself if this contractor was gone would I still have a functioning company?

      The key difference is that an employee is someone you need for the service or the production of the goods your company makes the bulk of its profits from. Contractors on the other hand are brought in for things that are outside the service your company provides and makes its money off of.

      This is why uber, left and doordash are all violating the law. If you take away the drivers they don't have a company. They don't even get to pretend that they're just a platform to find willing drivers because they exercise extensive control over the quality of their drivers.
      • And I hire a CPA that's fine because I build fences.

        Only if the CPA contracts with other companies, too. If your operation is big enough to generate enough hours for the CPA (may be less than full time; that's his call), so that most of the CPA's income is from your company, then he's economically dependent on you and you have to treat him as an employee, even if neither you nor he want that.

        You make an argument based on the purpose of the business vs the type of labor, but AFAICT, that has nothing to do with this proposed rule.

      • by cstacy ( 534252 )

        It is not fine if I'm a CPA and rather than hire employees to do extra taxes I pretend they're contractors.

        I believe the people that you want to hire come from firms with names like "AccounTemps". You (B2B) pay the company based on some hourly rate (which the worker does not actually get).

        I am not sure whether the workers (who technically don't work for you, even though they are at your premises and totally directed by you) are 1099 or W2. (I think they're W2, but that's not your problem. They get benefits from the contracting company.

        That'll be $5,000, please, Net 30 since we didn't have an open PO; and Thank Y

    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      Watch unforeseen consequences and "Gee, I thought the law was meant for..."

      This. Always this.

    • What about them? These rules will leave them unaffected. They only target fake contractors. Real contractors are not "economically dependent" on the company they work for, i.e. they set their own rates and own contractual terms.

      No CPA or consultant I have ever worked with comes in at work randomly charging his time at a fixed non-negotiated rate to a 3rd party mobile phone app provider.
      The only CPAs or consultants that have such little autonomy are actually full time employees of contract companies, and are

    • by BigZee ( 769371 )
      I don't know much of the details of this bill. However, this is something that has already happened in the UK (and I guess a lot of other countries). The main motivation for this was that it was a tax dodge. In the UK, contractors were able to take a very small salary from their company and then pay the majority of their income via share dividends. For IT contractors in particular, this made sense to avoid the 40% tax threshold on income. The main issue was that many people doing this were effectively full
  • some restaurants franchises should be covered under this as at some now days you have very little control and need to pay for store upgrades out of your pocket with little to no control over pricing.

  • Now the LLC I own is going to be forced to pay the only contractor (myself) more. Which is kind of a pain because what I'm holding back is my estimate of taxes and business expenses. I wonder if I'll be forced to buy healthcare via the LLC rather than directly.

    • Now the LLC I own

      How many people doing app-based gig economy work bothered to register their own actual business for the work they're doing for the gig companies? If we're going to have a litmus test for whether someone is a real contractor or an employee, having your own LLC should firmly place you on the side of "contractor" Besides, if your contracting business is a one man show, you're even legally allowed to opt out of Worker's Comp. insurance.

      • by stripes ( 3681 )

        having your own LLC should firmly place you on the side of "contractor"

        One might hope, but I'm not a big believer in trusting the government to do the right thing. So they may "fix" the Uber/DoorDash problems and hose over a bunch of singles person LLCs. I know I can opt out of workers comp on the federal level, and I think I can also do so at the state level, but one of my clients has a dumbass "we require the businesses we work with to have X, Y, Z" lists with no process for exceptions and item Y is w

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @05:31PM (#64142251)

    Biden just pissed off a group of people that want something other than a full-time job.

    • No he didn't. You're still free to be a contractor all you want. In fact more free now since you actually get a say in the terms of your contract instead of being an underpaid part time employee without the benefits of that title.

  • by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Monday January 08, 2024 @05:40PM (#64142295) Homepage

    The gig economy is just a fancy word for "exploit the hell out of workers".

    Now, I haven't been an employee for 25 years. I started my own company in 1999, sold it in 2018, then worked as a contractor until 2023. So I am all for contractors and entrepreneurs.

    But the gig economy is not the same as being a contractor. When you're a contractor, you set your own hours and prices. You get to pick and choose which clients to work for.

    Gig economy workers can't do that. Maybe they can pick their own hours to some extent. They certainly can't set their own prices and they will be kicked off the platform if they turn down too many jobs. Contractors are entrepreneurs who've decided that the contracting life is for them. Gig economy workers are simply employees being exploited by greedy corporations who cover up their shitty business model with shiny high-tech veneer.

    • To say all gig workers can't pick their own hours is grossly ignorant.
    • Yep. The gig economy is emperor's new clothes psuedo-freedom under the yoke of being underpaid piecemeal, taking on the costs and depreciation of a car and similar expensive work assets, and being cheated out of benefits. It's entirely magical thinking.
  • the puppeteers in charge of the Democratic Party have realized that the Republicans could run a plastic coat hanger against Biden, and they'd still have zero chance of keeping the White House or either house of Congress. So they're going to shove through as much as they can by Imperial, er, Presidential fiat, knowing that most of it will get tossed by SCOTUS, but hoping some will survive.

    • Ruth Bader Biden DGAF. He will dotard his way into losing against a mob-adjacent, criminally-indicted, used-car salesman because he lacks the leadership to get out of the way and let someone more electable run. Meanwhile, the rest of the Democratic field is currently costs of 2 unelectable nobodies. Democrats are going to LOSE and it's their own fault.
      • s/costs/consists/
      • Democrats are going to LOSE ...

        It's difficult to determine that: We know Biden is highly disliked (for making enduring changes to quality of governance) while Trump is highly popular (for doing fuck-all).

        Historically, 40%-47% Of US voters agree with the fascist/authoritarian/Christian regime offered by the Republican Party, which is difficult to overcome. While it seems the Democrat party cannot win, the Republican party is their own worst enemy. There's the in-fighting, the reneging on their own moral principles (although admiring

        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          2020 was pretty close, but a lot of the people who voted for Biden didn't know what he'd do. Now they do.

  • These companies are clearly preying on the vulnerabilities of their employees and cheating them out of benefits. I've seen plenty of IT shops where most people are contractors, they get no vacation and have expensive and crappy health insurance. They also have zero job security.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by luther349 ( 645380 )
      so just like working a normal job.
    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      Yet it's amazing that they still do the job as a contractor. You make it sound like they make pennies on the dollar compared to employees and that they're all miserable bastards. The fact of the matter, however, is that they make more per hour, enough that they can afford health insurance. Job security? Pah. True that it's a lot easier to let go of a contractor, but it's not that hard to let go of employees. Nobody's holding a gun to these contractors' heads, forcing them to do contract work, yet they
  • Sorry, this will sound partisan to some of you here... I cannot help it, it's history and a political party was involved.

    In California in 2019, the Democrats answered the demands of the unions, who are a critical part of the political base of the party, and passed a law designed to hit Uber and Lyft. The idea was to make all those drivers into employees, and then they could be unionized. It was called Assembly bill 5 ("AB5") [wikipedia.org]. They could not narrowly tailor it to Uber and Lyft without running afoul of the US

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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