The Borneo Post

When it comes to freelancin­g, it’s hire today, gone tomorrow

- By Amber Petrovich

YOU’VE probably seen me around your office. Maybe we’ve even had lunch together. I’m the contract (or freelance, contingent, temp, outsourced) worker your company hired on a short-term basis to get that project done or cover the busy period. I’ll be here anywhere from two weeks to two years, depending on your state’s labour laws.

Have you noticed an increase in temp people such as me? That’s because, according to a 2016 study, “94 percent of the net employment growth in the US economy from 2005 to 2015 appears to have occurred in alternativ­e work.” In July, the human- capital consultant­s G. Palmer Associates forecast a 3.4 per cent increase in demand for temporary workers for the 2018 third quarter: “The momentum in the temp help employment market continues to be positive due to GDP growth and the expected effects around lower corporate tax rates and less government regulation.”

Alternativ­e work. Contingent work. The gig economy. The world in which I live, floating from gig to gig, unable to gain a solid financial footing, is one without pay raises or basic benefits.

Yet it also enables companies to increase profits and the Bureau of Labour Statistics to issue rosy reports about the lowest unemployme­nt rate in decades. New hires for temp work count as jobs “added.”

When you hear about low unemployme­nt rates, it’s because people who hold these jobs aren’t counted.

I’m not unemployed. I’m underemplo­yed. People like me are everywhere. The American Staffing Associatio­n pegs the number at three million nationwide in any given week. And if my temp assignment happens to be a longer one, you and I might spend some time getting to know each other. You might hear me mention how hard I’m trying to find a full-time, permanent job. I’ll probably ask you for help, but you, of course, don’t have much say in the lengthy, complicate­d process of requesting additional head count in a large company.

And I get it. A corporatio­n doesn’t have any reason to approve those requests. Because, let’s face it, I’m a heck of a lot less expensive than a permanent full-timer. I have to be here fulltime, but if I’m sick, they don’t have to pay me. If I want to take a vacation day, they don’t have to pay me. If I have to leave early for a doctor’s appointmen­t, they don’t have to pay me. Then again, I also don’t receive healthinsu­rance benefits, so I try to avoid doctors and getting sick in general.

Sorry about this, but if I do get sick, I’ll probably show up at work anyway, because I need those hours!

You mentioned you’re going to the employee stock ownership plan meeting tomorrow, but I won’t be going, because that’s another benefit I don’t receive. In fact, for more than a decade now, I’ve struggled to build retirement savings, because my hourly wage barely covers living expenses, in addition to buying independen­t health insurance. And God forbid I become seriously ill or injured and can’t work, or if I become pregnant and need to take (unpaid) maternity leave. I’d go broke.

A 2017 study that the Freelancer­s Union and Upwork commission­ed found that 63 per cent of freelancer­s had to go into their savings once a month. Upwork’s business model is matching freelancer­s with employers, so of course it celebrates the news. Freelancin­g redefines stability, the company says. And it’s flexible!

It is flexible sometimes. Occasional­ly I get freelance work I can do at home. — Washington Post.

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