The impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market

"The digitalisation of work is creating new ways of intermediating work, with for example platforms intermediating work between individuals online. These so-called online collaborative platforms have the potential to fundamentally change the labour market, but for the moment, with an estimated...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: de Groen, Willem Pieter, Maselli, Ilaria
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Brussels 2016
CEPS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-043312486159-The-impact-of-the-collaborativ.htm
_version_ 1771659901518479362
author de Groen, Willem Pieter
Maselli, Ilaria
author_facet de Groen, Willem Pieter
Maselli, Ilaria
collection Library items
description "The digitalisation of work is creating new ways of intermediating work, with for example platforms intermediating work between individuals online. These so-called online collaborative platforms have the potential to fundamentally change the labour market, but for the moment, with an estimated 100,000 active workers or 0.05% of total employees in the EU, they do not seem to have a large impact on the offline/traditional labour market or the create/destroy impetus. This paper analyses the direct and indirect impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market. The findings, based on a collection of empirical studies, suggest that most workers do not earn their main income through online platforms and they obtain earnings from different types of platforms. Earnings from physical/local services are, in general, substantially higher than virtual services that can potentially be delivered globally. The paper also assesses the conditions, number of hours worked and employment status, compared to the offline labour market, and finds shows large differences across types of workers, platforms, and countries. The emergence of online collaborative platforms poses some challenges and opportunities for policy-makers. On the one hand, they may be challenged to ensure minimum remuneration, fair evaluation, tax declaration and social protection, and reduction of the administrative burden. On the other hand, the new technologies may provide opportunities to (partially) liberate some professional services and activate specific groups at a distance away from the labour market. This paper was commissioned by the European Commission as input into its European Agenda for the Collaborative Economy. This Agenda will take account of the direct and indirect impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market."
format TEXT
geographic EU countries
id 043312486159_bf90a27111f3486497726bc8305e5ca3
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 043312486159_bf90a27111f3486497726bc8305e5ca3
is_hierarchy_title The impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market
language English
physical 32 p.
Digital
publishDate 2016
publisher Brussels
CEPS
spellingShingle de Groen, Willem Pieter
Maselli, Ilaria
labour market
service sector
technological change
digitalisation
sharing economy
The impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=106930292411
title The impact of the collaborative economy on the labour market
topic labour market
service sector
technological change
digitalisation
sharing economy
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-043312486159-The-impact-of-the-collaborativ.htm