“I can’t do it, Matt.
I am boarding a flight to Seattle.
I have a DJ gig Saturday night so there is no way I can be back on site
this weekend.”
You can’t help but overhear cellphone conversations while
waiting in a crowded airport boarding gate lounge. The man next to me at the Oakland airport was
juggling the demands of his primary job and his “side gig” (or “side hustle”). As he explained to his supervisor, this weekend
job was paying him big money, so he could not just walk away from it and come
to work Sunday to finish the welding job at the client’s workplace.
Multiple-job holding,
gigs and side gigs
This worker was not alone.
The firefighter across the aisle was telling his mate about his
off-shift work as an electrician. The
government policy adviser next to me was marking term papers from the class he
teaches on-line.
On a recent cab trip to
the airport, my driver explained his other jobs. He helps connect foreign students with
employers during the days he is not driving and travels abroad three or four
times a year to help recruit students, arrange for their applications and
visas. He took two calls related to this
work during our drive to the airport.
A colleague at a recent Washington DC meeting hailed a
driver for his trip to the airport. He
swears by the ride-hailing services he uses as he travels in the US and internationally. Uber and Lyft
have more than 4.4 million drivers
between them—that’s more drivers than the population of half the states in the
US.
Gig jobs appear everywhere in my own community. A local social media site hosted a post from
one enterprising worker: house and dog
sitting services … as long as your home has wifi internet access so he or she
could work on-line. For online workers,
the possibility of being employed by several people at essentially the same
time can be a reality. My trek to Ikea
confronted me with TaskRabbit as a resource, to have a
“tasker” assemble my next purchase. And
a DoorDash
“dasher”, Skip the Dishes courier
or Uber
Eats driver is apparently ready to deliver our next food order to my
front door.
Gig jobs are not limited to driving or wielding a hex key. Technology enabled platforms like Upwork,
Freelancer,
and Fiverr have expanded the
market place for freelance services in categories from graphic design to jingle
creation . The listing opportunities are
even referred to as “ggs” on some platforms.
We used to think in terms of hiring the neighbour’s teenage
as a babysitter, dogwalker or housekeeper but demographic change alone means
the once ubiquitous supply of task-specific labour is now a scarce
resource. Task services like Care.com
now broker those limited engagements for child care, special needs care, senior
care, pet care, housekeeping and tutoring. Care.com’s Q4 2018 report states “total
caregivers grew to 13.4 million at the end of the fourth quarter of 2018, an
increase of 14% over the same period of 2017.”
One workers’ compensation CEO raised this issue during a
recent project consultation. She
believed there were a growing number of gig workers—many of whom are multi-job
holders; she worried about the risks this phenomenon imposed on workers and the
consequences for workers’ comp and occupational health and safety.
Shifts away from traditional
employment models
Evidence of a fundamental change is occurring in the
workplace is apparent beyond the OAK departure lounge. Deloitte
Insights noted the results of its Global Human Capital Trends survey of 11,000
human resource and business leaders [Dimple
Agarwal, Josh Bersin, Gaurav Lahiri, Jeff Schwartz, Erica Volini “The workforce
ecosystem: Managing beyond the enterprise”, Deloitte
Insights, March 28, 2018]:
- 50 percent of the year’s respondents reported a significant number of contractors in their workforces;
- 23 percent reported a significant number of freelancers, and
- 13 percent reported a significant number of gig workers.
The survey asked participants to forecast how their workforce
composition would change by 2020 relative to the present (presumably 2017/18).
“… 37 percent of this year’s survey respondents expected growth in the use of contractors, 33 percent in the use of freelancers, and 28 percent in the use of gig workers”.
Those contractors, freelancers and gig workers have different
characteristics that traditional employees.
Their work is more contingent with a strong likelihood of having
multiple employers either sequentially or even concurrently.
Multi-job Holding
While survey data like the Deloitte Insights study and observations in airport holding rooms
might suggest a growing issue, hard data
on the actual numbers of gig workers or those who are multi-job holding are
hard to come by. Part of this difficulty
comes from definitions of key terms like multi-job holding.
Defining multi-job holding alone is not as straightforward
as you might think. There are many
possible patterns that may be classified as multi-job holding. Most studies rely on self-reports of individuals,
which makes sense; workers know they are working multiple jobs. Employers generally are not aware if their
employees have additional work arrangements.
Administrative data such as tax filings and even employment insurance
(unemployment insurance) data typically do not look at the possible work
arrangements, only the report of income or insurability of work in the
qualifying period regardless of the number of employers.
While most workers in the economy have one employer and work
full or part-time for one employer, there are three patterns of multi-job
holding and workers may change patterns as personal, health, social or economic
demands or opportunities dictate.
The simplest and most common is a worker who has two or more
continuing employee/employer relationships at the same time. In this form of multi-job holding, there may
be a primary job with one employer and a part-time job with another. The clerk who works days in an office and
tends bar in the evenings and weekends, for example.
Another common pattern involves working for multiple
employers consecutively. This form of
multi-job holding is common in some trades and among workers with precarious
employment situations. Commonality in
title or occupation may or may not be present; most commonly, this pattern
tends to be in the same industry. A framing carpenter who works for consecutive
but often different employers would be one example; a farm worker who is a ski instructor in the
off season would be another.
Is it a gig or continuing
self-employment?
A growing number of workers have no primary job and instead
rely on a series of “gigs” as independent contractors or under project-specific
terms of employment with many different (but sometimes repeating)
employers. Although the term “gig” comes
from the entertainment industry, computer programmers, graphic designers, and
business consultants [and even conference speakers] may well use the term to describe their work engagements.
The key elements of gig employment were concisely stated in
a recent presentation:
a “gig” refers to a job with no long‐term connection to a particular business. Workers are employed on a particular task or for a defined time
[see Katharine Abraham, John C. Haltiwanger, Kristin Sandusky, and James R. Spletzer, “Measuring. the ‘Gig’ Economy,” U. of Maryland, October 2015; http://www.sole-jole.org/16375.pdf.]
Aside from the task or role and time specificity, this definition implies another distinguishing feature of gig employment from the gig workers’ perspective: gaps and overlaps in the employee/employer relationships (and often the lack of a primary, continuing employment arrangement). Gigs can be in the same line of work or different ones, each with a unique employer … as well as varying risks and workers’ compensation coverage.
Aside from the task or role and time specificity, this definition implies another distinguishing feature of gig employment from the gig workers’ perspective: gaps and overlaps in the employee/employer relationships (and often the lack of a primary, continuing employment arrangement). Gigs can be in the same line of work or different ones, each with a unique employer … as well as varying risks and workers’ compensation coverage.
[Note, although I have used the term “employer”, the term includes self-employment. A farmer may work daily on the farm
(self-employed in a primary, continuing form of self-employment) but work
off-farm in one or more jobs for an employer.
A self-employed tradesperson may wok for multiple customers but the
self-employment is the continuing employment.]
The graphic in this post delineates these alternatives in
their simplest forms. In reality, some
multi-job holders may have three or more distinct employer-employee
relationships simultaneously.
Why multi-job holding
and gig employment exist
It is important to emphasize that multi-employment may be a
necessity or a choice. Workers may need
multiple jobs to support themselves and their families, to put food on the
table, pay the rent, or put the kids through college. For others, gig work may be a function of the
labour market, a consequence of episodic disability, or family demands. There are some who may chose multi-job
holding for other reasons including mental health or lifestyle.
Multi-job holding can provide a variety of experiences, a
way to develop new skills, or increase social contact. Reasons other than financial can drive
multi-job holding. The architect or
teacher with a passion for music may play in a band or teach out of a creative
rather than financial need. I’ve spoken
to a number of gig workers who love the flexibility and variety multiple-job
holding offers them. For others,
however, working multiple jobs is often a consequence of labour market factors (including
the lack of available, continuing, full time employment opportunities) and
financial realities (including the high cost of housing, food, transportation
and childcare or education).
From the employer perspective, contingent and casual labour
is often needed to augment staffing during peak (often seasonal) demand. As firms hone in on their core products and
services, the cost of retaining talent or skills of those not so closely aligned
with that core becomes debatable. Does a
school board need to have carpenters, flooring specialists or grounds keepers
on staff? Many did and some still do but
others have contracted these services out.
Traditionally, those awarded contracts would seek out, screen, hire and
supply labour for these tasks but platform-based services are disrupting that
model, at least in larger centres where the density of potential gig workers is
greater. With a database of screened and
skilled labour willing to take on task-specific and time-limited assignments,
even subcontractors are using platform matching services to fill their own peak
demands.
Gigs and gig “workers”[?]
There are no hard and fast definitions in available labour
force survey data for gigs or gig workers and this leads to some
confusion. Our economy is built on the concept
of capital and labour; capital engages labour most typically through employment. Most employment is in the form of a
continuing full or part-time relationship between the worker and the employer. Traditionally, employers deal with peak need
and project requirements through temporary, part time and other direct but
“contingent” employment.
The employed labour force is mostly comprised of full and
part-time workers engaged with a single employer. These engagements are not typically called
gigs. Self-employed workers and
contractors are also a traditional part of the labour force. Independent plumbers, electricians and other
trades may be self-employed but provide labour in the economy. Most studies I’ve read differentiate continuing
trades work from gig jobs but the distinction is not always well defined.
Most sources have solid definitions for full time work but
may have less well-defined terms for other categories. Consider these terms used to describe and categorize
workers outside the traditional full and part-time roles:
- Contractor
- Freelancer
- Consultant
- Gig worker
- Crowd (and Cloud) labour
Each term carries connotations about skill, employment
status, and work pattern but most would not be considered “employees” in the
same way a full-time employee is understood to have an employment relationship
with a specific employer.
The more traditional terms of “freelancer” and “consultant”
may now be lumped in with the category of gig workers. The terms associated with gig workers are not
definitive of legal status under workers’ compensation law or other
statute. They may be considered
self-employed contractors but may also be employed workers of a labour
supplier, sub-contractor or consulting firm.
A gig opportunity may be with a specific employer but the
relationship may be harder to define; the employer engages a freelancer or a
sub-contractor who may engage a gig worker.
An intermediary platform may match a task with an individual. This arrangement is the one most closely
associated with the current use of “gigs”.
In some cases, the gig worker is
an employee of an intermediary firm. The
“labour contractor” model applies but the labourer or professional is engaged
for a specific task or project and for a specific time: the task-time-location parameters define the
gig; the platform provides the gig worker (Dasher, Tasker, Uber Driver, etc.).
Multi-job
holding: Stable rate but of greater
concern for women, youth, and service sector workers
The lack of universal definitions for gig and gig workers
means that data on their numbers is far from precise. Ask a musician about work. They may call their profession “musician” or “entertainer”,
and likely tell you about their performances.
Each venue/event may be referred to as a gig. The are also likely to tell you about the
other jobs they do to put food on the table.
The perception that gig employment is growing is not easily
tested against existing data sources.
Given the characteristics of gig employment noted above, one indicator
of the size and grown of gig employment would be in the statistics regarding
multiple job holding.
The most recent data appear to show current levels of multiple
job holding are relatively low and stable.
Recent data posted by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) uses data
from the Current Population Survey [see table at https://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat36.htm
] to show about 5% of all employed
persons age 16 and over are working
multiple jobs. The rate is higher for
single, divorced/separated, and widowed women generally (above 6%). Women in
the 20-24 age range report the highest level of multiple job holding (6.8% in
2017, 6.6% in 2018).
The data in Canada are similar. Using Statistics Canada December 2018
employment data and Table:
14-10-0044-01, the rate of multiple
job holding is about 5.7%. Perhaps not
surprisingly, the service sector accounts for 90% of workers holding multiple
or concurrent jobs. Western Canada has a
much higher rate of multiple job holding at 7.5% for Saskatchewan and Manitoba
and about 6.3% for British Columbia and Alberta. About 57% of multiple job
holders in Canada are women.
Australian data suggests an even greater degree of multiple
job holding in their labour force.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics [ABS], approximately
15% of employed persons were multiple job holders—a level that has been
consistent since 2011/12. According to a
recent ABS analysis, “The highest proportion of multiple job holders worked
their highest earning concurrent job in the Health care and social assistance
industry.” [ see ABS 6160.0
- Jobs in Australia, 2011-12 to 2015-16 issued 19 September 2018] It should
be noted, however, that data for self-employed persons with other employment may
not be fully reflected in their data.
Multi-job
holding: Health and Safety Concerns?
There is not a lot of research into the health and safety
impacts of multiple-job holding. Some
studies have noted positive mental health outcomes particularly in the absence
of financial stress. Other studies lower
hours of sleep and higher injury rates among multiple-job holders. [see Marucci-Wellman HR, Willetts JL, Lin T, Brennan MJ, Verma SK. Work in multiple jobs and the risk of injury in the US working population, Am J Public Health. 2014;104(1):134–142 ; Marucci-Wellman HR, Lombardi
DA, Willetts, Working multiple jobs over a day or a week: Short-term effects on sleep
duration. JL Chronobiol Int. 2016; 33(6):630-49.]
A recent study of Dutch workers (age 45 and older) lead
researchers to develop four themes to classify experiences with multi-job holding:
- work characteristics influence respondents’ experiences
- personal context affects how work characteristics influence experiences
- negative experiences with work characteristics often coincide with problems in personal context
- experiences with MJH can change as part of a dynamic process.
The study found three main subgroups of responses among
multi job holders: those for whom the
positive consequences outweigh the negative, where the consequences are neither
positive nor negative and those who experiences mainly negative health
consequences including health impacts [ see Bouwhuis, S., De Wind, A., De Kruif, A., Geuskens, G. A., Van der Beek, A. J., Bongers, P. M., & Boot, C. (2018). Experiences with multiple job holding: a qualitative study among Dutch older workers. BMC public health, 18(1), 1054].
The challenge for the prevention mandate may be one of
awareness. Multi-job holders may not be
fully aware of their risks and their risks may be dependent on that is
significantly unique to the individual. Research
on occupational health and safety and the impact of sleep patterns on health
and alertness tend to focus on workers in single-job, not multi-job holders.
Workers with multiple jobs may also face unknown risks in
each new job site. Research tells us
that “newness” to a venue or task is a risk factor for work-related
injury. Newness of venue and often specific
tasks epitomize many gig jobs; the particular workplace, tools, or agents (and
the risks they pose) in the job site may be familiar to the regular workers but
obscure to a gig worker. Workers who are
frequently changing job sites may also face different safety cultures with
varying degrees of openness about hazards, risks, safe working procedures… and
reporting safety concerns. Where the
jobs are precarious but recalls are important, workers may also be reticent to
“rock the boat” for fear of losing a future (or continuing) opportunity.
Multi-job holding and
gig jobs: Are they covered by workers’
compensation?
Traditional jobs and multi-job holding are typically covered
by workers’ compensation, at least in principle and individually. As I discussed in my post “Will workers’
compensation cover income lost from my second job?”[ https://workerscompperspectives.blogspot.com/2015/06/will-workers-compensation-cover-income.html
or https://wordpress.com/post/workerscompperspectives.wordpress.com/630
],
multi-job holding workers are covered wages lost in the
accident employment but losses in their second or other job may not be
covered. The gig economy complicates
matters further. Is a tasker, driver, or
dasher an employee or a self-employed worker?
Who, exactly is the employer? If
the worker is considered and independent operator, do they have access to optional
workers’ compensation coverage? At what
point does my hiring a childcare provider through an app make me the
employer? There are no consistent
answers for either the workers providing these services or the consumers of them.
Alternative insurance arrangements may provide some coverage
for drivers working for Uber or Lyft but those cannot offer the same
protections as workers’ compensation provide.
Traditionally, workers hired by an employer have the guaranteed
protections of workers’ compensation:
compensation for lost wages and permanent disability, medical costs, and
rehabilitation services. The employer
has protections, too. The workers’
compensation coverage protects the employer from suit in the case of work-related
injury and limits the direct cost of rare, catastrophic events. The
exclusive remedy of workers’ compensation that protects employers and
co-workers from tort may not extend to gig workers.
A recent CBC marketpace episode [CBC, Marketplace Episode 46, November 16, 2018] reported on issues in the
food delivery sector. The episode web
page posts accompanying documents with these specific responses from Uber Eats and Skip the Dishes regarding workers’ compensation coverage:
Skip the Dishes:
In Canada, each province has its own unique worker compensation framework. We are currently registered with workers' compensation boards in Manitoba, British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta, and continue to engage with these boards while maintaining the flexibility, benefit, and independence our couriers enjoy thanks to being their own bosses.
Uber Eats:
Uber Canada’s office and customer-support staff is registered in provinces where that type of work requires registration. That registration is not specific to Uber Eats. Delivery partners are independent contractors and this type of work does not require registration by Uber Canada.
More questions than answers
Official data suggest that multi-job holding is lower now than
in the past and relatively stable; anecdotal
commentary and observation particularly regarding gig jobs appear to contradict
the official data. It may be that the
same number of workers holding are holding more jobs or that individual gigs
are being grouped and considered as one job.
It may be that the reported data don’t capture the nuance of workplace
realities. It is possible, for example,
that a worker working sequentially for 5 employers in the year and one who works
two full-time jobs and three part-time jobs are counted the same way in some
surveys and differently in others.
Insurance including workers’ compensation coverage is
complex and most people can’t imagine all the possible hazards, risks and potential
loss. No worker goes to work contemplating
being injured that day but injuries occur; gig workers or multi-job holders may
find they do not have the coverage they need.
If the gig is covered by workers’ compensation, there is no guarantee earnings
lost from other jobs will be covered and compensated and vice versa. I doubt
most gig workers and multi-job holders are aware of these potential gaps.
Consumers are also in a bind. In some cases, gig workers are employees of a
service; in others, they are independent operators--- and independent operators
may or may not be covered by workers’ compensation… and that changes the
liability profile the consumer faces. Consumers
cannot be expected to get a Clearance
Letter or Certificate of Insurance
for each gig service they engage.
If the projections are accurate and the trend towards more contract
work, freelance, and gig employment continues, employers will face an
increasingly complex workers’ compensation and occupational safety
environment. When everyone who worked
for an employer was covered by the same workers’ compensation policy and
occupational safety and health rules, managing risk and benefits may not have
been simple, but it was manageable. In a
world with shifting employment patterns, multi-job holding and gig employment, managing
risk and benefits is going to get even more complex.
It is clear that the labour market is changing and that
research into the changes is lagging.
While gig employment is still a minor segment of labour spectrum, it is
likely to grow. Existing definitions and
data may not adequately describe work and quantify the risks or costs to
workers, employer, consumers and society in general.
Technology enables the expansion of the gig economy. The disruption of traditional labour market
dynamics means traditional definitions and methods may not adequately address this
changing reality. For occupational safety
and health regulators, these changes alter workplace risks for traditional
workers, gig workers and other persons in the workplace. For workers’ compensation insurers, gig
employment may be increasing wage compensation liability for insured employers. For legislators and policy makers, there are
fundamental questions about who should be covered and how much of the cost of work-related
injuries should be contained by workers’ compensation or externalized to others,
including tax payers.
There are no simple ways to address these issues. Research can help define our terms and
develop methods to analyze data or more accurately describe and categorize work.
Traditional administrative and
operational data may mask the changes in the workplace leading to inaction or
missed opportunities to protect workers from injury.