
The New American Job
Are freelance and
part-time gigs the future?
Linda Stern
Newsweek Web
Exclusive
Jan 28, 2009 | Updated: 9:59 a.m. ET Jan 28, 2009
In this economy, a job isn't just a job: It's a pastiche
of part-time gigs, project contracts and fill-in freelance work. According to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment was up in December across all
fifty states from the previous month and the prior year. Some 2.5 million
full-time jobs have evaporated in the last 13 months, contributing to what's
being called the "gig economy." But there is a convergence of other,
more developed trends at play as well. Tight-budgeted company managers
long ago embraced outsourcing to only pay for what they can use. A new
generation of workers has 24/7 connectivity, lacks corporate loyalty, and
thinks like (if the McCain/Palin contingent will give
us back the word) mavericks. Put them together and you get gigonomics.
Hustling isn't new to the writers, photographers, Web
designers, musicians and other creative types who've been gigging for decades.
"Now that everyone has a project-to-project freelance career, everyone is
a hustler," Tina Brown wrote recently, drawing attention to the trend at
her Web site, The Daily Beast. What's making Brown and others take notice
now is the spread of independent work to higher-income workers, and to
professions not known for their creativity, such as finance, law and human
resources. And while an earlier generation of giggers
may have embraced the hustle because it afforded them time with the kids or the
chance to pursue their art, the newest entrants may be getting pushed into it
by employers who no longer want to be saddled with their health-insurance
bills.
Contingent workers--including part-timers, freelancers
and contractors--consistently made up about 30 percent of the workforce between
1996 and 2005, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. That
number might be higher the next time they measure: In the last year alone, the
number of people working part-time because they couldn't find full-time work
almost doubled from 4.5 million to nearly 8 million. "The future is one in
which tying your identity to the companies you work for is getting more and
more tenuous," says employment consultant John Challenger of Challenger
Gray & Christmas. "Once they come to the conclusion that there's no
stable place to work, people are saying, 'OK, I'm going to build my own workstyle.' It's almost like we're going back to the days
of the guild."
That has policy implications and can create new winners
and losers. Winners may include companies like elance.com, a job-auction Web
site that saw 239,000 project postings in 2008, a 63 percent increase over
2007, or snagajob.com, where increasing numbers of middle-aged and main family
breadwinners are picking up part-time fill-in work. There's new industry space
for everything from benefits consultants to office-supply firms in the place
where project-offering employers meet hungry job shoppers.
Gigonomics
Central is probably
In a freelance-based job market, talented, skilled and
energetic people can still do great work and make good money. But those highly
qualified workers who aren't good at the business side of selling themselves,
over and over, can suffer. Even connected, ambitious, talented giggers can hit slow periods, and that's where the gigonomics start to pinch. "You have to bring in a
project and then the project ends, and then you have to bring in another project,"
says Challenger. "That can be a difficult time. It can make you doubt
yourself when you might be good."
And it isn't just about feelings. The complete lack of a
safety net for independent workers is the key policy challenge of the gigonomic era, says Horowitz, who received a prestigious
MacArthur fellowship for her advocacy work in this area. Her organization is
pressing President Obama to include relief for self-employed workers in his
stimulus plan. She is lobbying for a savings system in which contingent workers
could get some government-matching funds when they put rainy-day money away
during fat times.
She would also like to see other policy initiatives aimed
at the independent workforce, including more non-employer mechanisms for
affordable group health insurance, flexible retirement plans, and tax breaks to
address the additional Social Security and Medicare taxes paid by the
self-employed.
When the economy improves, there will be a core group of giggers who won't return to full-time jobs, according to
analysts like Challenger and Horowitz. Their incomes will rise as labor markets
improve, corporate budgets grow, and companies pay up for solid skills and
talents. They'll be happy to have the better-paying projects, but people like
Bond and Kushi are likely to eschew the company ID
and its regular paycheck. After all, the next gig might be the best one yet.
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