Digital platforms profit from the self-exploitation and bogus self-employment of their “employees”. The EU Commission is
now proposing guidelines for European countries to prevent this. The aim is to control working conditions with the aim
of employing suppliers and other bogus self-employed workers.What is the problem? – Bogus self-employment and self-exploitation
Precarious working conditions, no planning security, health risks and stress, stress, stress! They rush from A to B
every day and hardly have time to go to the toilet in between. They bring us our parcels, our food and drive us home at
night because taxis are too expensive. They are self-employed and work for digital platforms and have one thing in
common above all: they have hardly any rights.Digital platforms: The fairy tale of the intermediaries
Digital platforms like Uber, Mjam and Deliveroo employ self-employed people and bring them together with potential
customers. They are intermediaries, not employers. They emphasise this again and again. They do this because if they
were employers, they would have to take care of the health and safety of their employees. They would have to pay the
minimum wage and comply with the labour laws in force in the EU. But they don’t – at least not yet.
“The digital economy is often presented as the economy of the future. There is no doubt that it offers companies new
perspectives, but also at the expense of some workers,” says Aude Cefaliello, a researcher at the European Trade Union
Institute (ETUI).The digital boss: an algorithm
In fact, the self-employed are employees. They report to a digital boss: an algorithm that monitors them and evaluates
their performance. The most efficient employees are assigned good shifts, the less efficient are sanctioned. The
constant comparison builds up pressure and leads to many a risk being taken. Especially in road traffic, this repeatedly
leads to stress-related traffic accidents. (https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-45247655)Resistance rises across Europe: right to holidays and minimum wage
Several countries are now taking legal and judicial action against exploitation:Spain: Since March 2021, delivery drivers are considered workers and must be employed by the platforms.
France: The Supreme Court defines the employment relationship between couriers and platforms as wage labour.
These rulings have one thing in common: “They dispel the myth of ‘independent contractors’ and ‘micro-enterprises’ and
recognise that these people are in fact dependent employees who would be entitled to any protection under labour law,”
says Cefaliello.New EU Commission guidelines: moving away from laissez-faire towards fairness
The EU Commission’s proposals essentially refer to the following 3 pointsClear criteria as to whether employment exists: The control criteria for employment status should create clarity and enable legal protection. Unlike self-employed
workers, employees are entitled to minimum wage, collective bargaining, regulated working hours, pension and paid
holidays and sick days.
Control of working conditions: The use of algorithms should become more transparent. Humans – not digital applications – should control compliance
with working conditions. Employees and the self-employed should be able to challenge automated decisions in court in the
future.
Transparency of employment relationships: National authorities have hardly any access to data about the employees of digital platforms – this should change. In
future, digital platforms are to disclose information about the people working for them. Digital companies are thus to
report their employees to the competent authorities like all other companies.
“The precise definition of the future of work and its social and human dimensions is increasingly at stake”. The EU
Commission would do well to define this clearly now, says Silvia Rainone. She researches labour law, digital companies
and social dialogue at the ETUI.What is important now: Implementation at the national level
If the proposed guidelines are adopted, it will only be the first step towards a fairer future. In principle, however,
it is in the hands of the member states to implement them and adapt them if necessary. For one thing is certain: digital
companies will have to rethink their profitable business model. This does not seem to be in their interest, otherwise
they would have done it long ago.
Originally published here. By Scoop.me/Ingo Geiger