Africa When it comes to gig workers in Africa, there are significant variations across different countries. Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for 13% of the world's workforce, and over 85% of employment in Africa is informal.
Asia China In China, the 2021 Gig Worker Rights Protection Guidelines direct labor unions to expand membership coverage to gig workers,
courts and
arbitration agencies to improve procedures for resolving labor disputes involving gig workers, and labor regulators to improve oversight and enforce compliance with national
occupational safety and health standards. Independent reporting and labor scholarship note that coverage remains uneven, and many gig workers still lack formal employment contracts or social security coverage.
India NITI Aayog defines 'gig workers' as those engaged in work outside of the traditional employer-employee arrangement. In 2020–21, the gig economy was estimated to employ 7.7 million workers, with a projected workforce of 23.5 million by 2029–30. The industry is expected to produce a revenue of $455 billion by 2024. 47% of gig workers are employed in medium-skilled jobs, about 22% in high-skilled jobs, and about 31% in low-skilled jobs. 93% of the Indian population is employed in the
informal economy, which depends on local linguistic, ethnic, and regional dynamics and networks. The technologization of informal labor with app-based work has obviated the need to navigate these local systems for work and payment. Rural-to-urban migrants form a majority of the gig workforce, which serves as an intermediary work settlement and an alternative to unregulated contractors who place them at risk of trafficking and other forms of exploitation. Class and caste identities that have historically been excluded from the formal labor market have utilized the gig economy as a means to escape discrimination. However, the term "platform paternalism" has emerged to describe the perpetuation of caste and class hierarchies, trapping workers in jobs with very little security and no potential for long-term growth. For instance, caste-oppressed women continue to dominate low-paying work, such as cleaning and washing in households. BookMyBai, a platform service that helps people hire house-maids and caretakers, has provisions to request workers from specific geographic regions and religions. This has been criticized for perpetuating
caste-based discrimination. The
Indian Federation of App-based Transport Workers and the Telangana Gig and Platform Workers Union currently have 36,000 and 10,000 members respectively, including cab drivers, food and grocery delivery workers, and e-commerce delivery persons. Some of the demands of these unions include security benefits, higher base fares, and protection against exploitation by aggregator companies. In response, the Indian parliament passed new laws guaranteeing social security and occupational health and safety of gig workers in 2020. These laws are yet to be implemented. In its 2021 report, NITI Aayog also recommended fiscal incentives including tax breaks or startup grants for companies with about one-third of their workforce as women and people with disabilities. Securing social protection coverage, improving national statistics on gig and platform work and policy options, and discussing insurance and tax-financed schemes for gig platforms have been delineated as key priorities for the
G20 summit 2023, held at Delhi, India. On 24 July 2023, the
Rajasthan legislative assembly approved a groundbreaking bill that provides social security benefits to gig workers, making it the first of its kind in India. The Rajasthan Platform-Based Gig Workers (Registration and Welfare) Bill, 2023, aims to enlist all gig workers and aggregators operating in the state, ensuring they receive essential social security protections. Additionally, the bill establishes a mechanism for gig workers to voice and address their grievances.
South Korea Gig work is spreading into side jobs and the delivery business.
Kakao has hired drivers to build a proxy-driving system, and the delivery team is meeting the surging demand through a near-field delivery service called "Vamin Connect". There is a gig-work platform for professional freelancers, not just for work. The platform, which connects those seeking skilled professionals with those with skills, offers 10 types of services, including design, marketing, computer programming, translation, document writing, and lessons. However, "gig worker" is not yet very welcome in Korea. This is because many "gig workers" have conflicts with existing services, exposing a lack of social and legal preparation.
Southeast Asia Gig work in Southeast Asia has been growing rapidly since 2010; according to World Bank estimates in 2019, the gig work population has experienced a consistent 30% annual growth rate. Although there is already a large informal sector in many Southeast Asian countries, the growing number of gig workers in the region is increasing demand for labor regulations to protect workers from unfair labor practices. The pandemic has highlighted this concern and shone light on the vulnerability of gig workers in Southeast Asia. In Indonesia, ojek drivers in particular were left without either a social safety net or health protection. The Platform Workers Act regulates gig work in Singapore since January 2025. Worker benefits include higher Central Provident Fund contribution rates, work injury compensation insurance, collective bargaining power through Platform Work Associations, and more.
Australia In Australia, the gig economy includes services such as ride sharing, food delivery, and various types of personal services for a fee. It is against the law for an employer to classify a worker as an independent contractor when they are, in fact, an employee. Where this happens, the business could be liable for penalties under the Fair Work Act, and have to backpay the entitlements.
Europe When it comes to platform workers in Europe, there are significant differences across countries. The UK has the highest incidence of platform work. Other countries with high relative values are Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, and Italy. By contrast, Finland, Sweden, France, Hungary, and Slovakia show very low values compared to the rest. The typical European platform worker is a young male. A typical platform worker is likely to have a family and kids, and, regardless of age, they tend to have fewer years of labour market experience than the average worker. The majority of platform workers provide more than one type of service and are active on two or more platforms. While flexibility and autonomy are frequently mentioned motivations for platform workers, so too is the lack of alternatives.
United Kingdom In some jurisdictions, legal rulings have classified full-time freelancers in the gig economy who work for a single main employer as workers and awarded them the rights and protections of regular workers. An example is the October 2016 ruling against Uber in
Uber BV v Aslam, which supported the claim of two Uber drivers that they should be classified as workers and receive the associated worker rights and benefits. In 2019, the
UK Supreme Court provided guidance on how to categorize "gig economy" workers. The London-based company
Pimlico Plumbers lost an appeal against the argument that one of its plumbers was a "worker", i.e., not an employee, but enjoying some "employment" rights such as holiday pay and sickness pay. The Employment Appeals Tribunal ruled that Hermes' couriers are "workers" with certain statutory benefits including minimum wage, rest periods and holiday pay. In 2018, Uber lost a court case which claimed drivers are workers and therefore entitled to workers' rights, including the national minimum wage and paid holiday. Another UK company involved in "worker status" legal cases is
CitySprint. On 19 February 2021, the Supreme Court ruled in favour of 25 Uber drivers having "worker status"; the publication
Personnel Today suggests that this case establishes "once and for all that in the UK the self-employed app-based driver model is no longer viable". Many "gig economy workers" have not been able to receive
COVID-19 pandemic support funding.
Latin America and Caribbean Brazil The
precarity of work, with the growth of digital applications for the delivery of goods and services, a phenomenon popularly known as
uberization, despite occurring in several countries around the world, has gained strength in
Brazil, a country affected by deindustrialization and dependence on the service sector. Despite promises from Brazilian government authorities to enact new laws to regulate the activity, the absence of specific regulations governing this new form of relationship between Brazilian companies and gig workers has increased legal uncertainty and has been a source of social conflict. According to the
IPEA, a government-led research agency, it was estimated that in October 2021, there were 1.4 million gig workers in Brazil.
United States In 2015, nearly one in ten Americans (8%) earned money using digital platforms to take on a job or task. Meanwhile, nearly one in five Americans (18%) have earned money by selling something online, while 1% have rented out their properties on a home-sharing site. Adding up everyone who has performed at least one of these three activities, some 24% of American adults earned money in the "platform economy" in 2015. In 2022, the U.S. Department of Labor released a proposal to revise the Department's guidance on determining whether someone is an employee or an independent contractor under the
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The proposed rule would make it easier for gig workers/independent contractors to gain full employee status. Companies would be required to provide rights and benefits to gig workers/independent contractors equivalent to standard employees. These benefits include the minimum wage, health insurance, Social Security contributions, and unemployment insurance. The rule would replace a previous one enacted under the Trump administration that made it more difficult for a gig worker/independent contractor to be classified as an employee.
Age disparities Eligible workers of all ages participate in the gig economy. The highest percentage of Americans who report having earned money at least once via gig work through an online platform is among those aged 18-29, at 30%. Participation drops to 18% for individuals between 30 and 49 years of age and is lower than for those 50 and older. The consulting firm McKinsey attributes the difference in participation by age in part to the low barrier of entry into gig work as young adults are still developing marketable skill sets for other lines of work. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) finds that, despite a general decline in gig workforce participation with age, approximately 20% of retired Americans participate in the gig economy, primarily by providing services such as tutoring, hosting rentals, caring for pets, and ride-hail driving. AEI states that the increase in gig work participation following retirement is due in part to fear of financial preparedness for retirement, given the increase in life expectancy or the effect of economic decline on the value of retirement accounts. However, AEI also cites boredom as a significant reason for participation, with 96% of gig workers over 65 reporting they feel more fulfilled when they maintain a job they enjoy.
Racial disparities Gig work participation also varies by race in the United States. More non-white Americans report having earned money in the gig economy – 30% of Hispanic adults, 20% of Black adults, and 19% of Asian adults - than their white counterparts, at 12%. The differences in participation by race can be explained in part by individuals' migrant status, as globally, a disproportionate number of migrants report earning money through gig work. 58% of gig workers surveyed said the extra income earned as either "essential" or "important" as opposed to "nice to have". In 2021, more non-white gig workers expressed concern about their exposure to COVID-19 on the job, at 50%, than their white counterparts, at 38%. A similar difference between races was found among standard workers with respect to their employer’s lack of COVID-19 precautions. (In the US, there are two mutually exclusive employee classifications; the following ballot initiative created a third in California.) In response to AB 5, app-based ride-sharing and delivery companies
Uber,
Lyft,
DoorDash,
Instacart, and
Postmates created a ballot initiative (
2020 California Proposition 22), which won with 60% of the vote and exempted them from providing the full suite of mandated
employee benefits (time-and-a-half for overtime, paid sick time, employer-provided health care, bargaining rights, and unemployment insurance - among others) while instead giving drivers new protections of: • 120 percent of the local minimum wage for each hour a driver spends driving (with passenger or en route), but not time spent waiting • $0.30/mile for expenses for each mile driven with a passenger or en route • health insurance stipend for drivers who average more than 15 hours per week driving • requires the companies to pay medical costs and some lost income for drivers hurt while driving or waiting • prohibits workplace discrimination and requires that companies: develop sexual harassment policies, conduct criminal background checks, and mandate safety training for drivers == See also ==