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How jobs figures mask bogus self-employment in the shadow economy

This article by , Professor of Employment Studies, ; , Research Fellow, , and , Professor of Social Theory & Institutions,  was originally published on . Read the .

The UK has posted disappointing jobs data. Unemployment rose slightly for the first time in seven months, by 21,000 to 1.7m. It is still at a respectable rate of 5.1% and employment remains very high at 74.1%. But the figures need unpicking to identify the problems that lie beneath the surface of the country鈥檚 economy, despite months of .

A closer look at the jobs situation in the UK shows that since the 2008 financial crisis, many workers have experienced low-wage precariousness. There has been an increase in flexible 鈥渘on-standard鈥 working patterns: part-time work, zero hours contracts, and underemployment.

Self-employment in particular has risen sharply. indicates an all-time record of 4.63m self-employed people in 2016 (15% of the UK workforce) 鈥 nearly double the figures in 1975. Self-employment is common in sectors like construction, social care, delivery drivers, taxi drivers, hairdressing, and management consultants.

The UK government recently commissioned an independent review of self-employment 鈥 the . But, as the Royal Society of Arts , while the report rightly emphasised the living standards of the self-employed, it is 鈥渁n underwhelming response to an overwhelming phenomenon鈥.

One in seven working people are estimated to be self-employed and the types of people and their experience of self-employment varies significantly. For example, a stay-at-home mum in a two-income family running her own childminding business and a single parent cleaner on a zero hours contract may both be self-employed but have different experiences.

Too little is known about changing work patterns at the margins of the labour market and research is required to explore peoples鈥 experiences of self-employment. In the meantime, there鈥檚 a risk that a growing chunk of the workforce will experience precarious, insecure working lives in a system currently ill-equipped to provide sufficient numbers of good quality jobs. The UK does not have a coherent labour market policy or industrial strategy to address these problems.

Low paid and precarious

People might self-identify as being entrepreneurs by managing to earn anything at all in a post-crisis jobs market. This is especially the case in regional economies that have been hollowed out by the decimation of traditional industries such as mining and .

On average, the self-employed earn less than other workers, as well as having less access to benefits like training and pensions. They are exempt from minimum wage legislation, so will not benefit from the recent .

A 2015 parliamentary briefing shows that, worryingly, average income from self-employment fell by 22% between 2008-09 and 2012-13 to 拢207 a week. And data from the indicated that in 2012-13, the average (median) income from self-employment sources was 拢11,000 a year. This compares with current for the whole labour force of 拢497 a week and 拢25,844 annually.

Self-employment status can also such as sick leave and holiday pay. Evidently, more employers have been replacing directly employed staff with workers who are formally and legally self-employed but in reality highly dependent on a firm. By having commercial contracts instead of traditional employment contracts, firms can avoid employment and social security laws. In so doing, they have more control and power over these workers, as well as increasing their profits.

An 鈥榰berised鈥 economy

This shadow economy is encroaching into diverse sectors like oil and gas, as well as delivery and taxi drivers. In addition to on-demand apps such as Uber, new firms are emerging such as TaskRabbit, an online service for outsourcing everyday jobs, and Upwork, a platform for freelancers. This increased 鈥渦berisation鈥 of the online market for casual labour and the impact of new technology means it includes both low and high skill occupations.

Uber is a good example of how self-employment has become a contentious classification. There are more than 30,000 Uber taxi drivers in the UK, who are labelled as self-employed partners. But the GMB trade union, which covers a number of industries, is for the minimum wage and statutory holidays 鈥 benefits that are normally afforded to employees but not the self-employed. Meanwhile, in the US, the California Labor Commissioner鈥檚 Office that an Uber driver should be classified as an employee, not an independent contractor.

The rise in false self-employment, dependent self-employment, online labour, and the expansion of the shadow economy generally, renders regulation problematic. A number of trade unions have periodically campaigned on related issues. But unions still mainly represent members in conventional employment and larger organisations.

Tax and other regulatory bodies also face classification problems in terms of how different kinds of employment status are or are not legally recognised in contracts. Classification is more problematic given labour market fragmentation and diversity of individual employment status.

False self-employment is not an official classification, by the statistics body the ONS, for example. It has, however, been acknowledged by the tax authorities and the UK Trades Union Congress, due to concerns may be designed to avoid employment rights and tax and social security payments that would normally be associated with employee status.

There are no figures on the extent of this shadow economy activity and estimations are difficult, as it is often secretive. But, if left unchecked, problems like misclassified bogus self-employment could further erode job quality, employment rights, create tax deficits, and extend the precarious shadow labour force.

The Conversation

 

Publication date: 20 April 2016

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