Stuff You Should Know - What's the gig economy?
Episode Date: June 11, 2019The gig economy is not new, but it's bigger than ever. Is that a good thing? We'll discuss that today! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/liste...ner for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
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And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
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Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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Hello there, it's me, Josh, and I just wanted
to let you know, people living in Minneapolis
or with access to Minneapolis,
I'm gonna be in your city doing my solo show,
The End of the World, or How I Learned
to Start Worrying and Love Humanity.
It's a gas, and it's pretty interesting too.
So on June 19th, I'll be at the Parkway Theater
in Minneapolis, and the next night,
I'll be at the Miracle Theater in Washington, D.C.
So come see me, go to themiracletheater.com
or theparkwaytheater.com for tickets.
Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh Clark,
and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there is our guest producer today, Dylan.
Yeah, Dylan, it's been a minute.
Yeah, we picked Dylan up by advertising on TaskRabbit,
saying that we needed a guest producer today,
and here he is.
That's not true.
But it could be, Chuck, it could be.
That is true.
It is true.
The reason it could be is because,
whether you know this or not, Charles,
we are living smack dab in the middle
of what's called a gig economy.
Sure, partially, yeah.
Yeah, and a lot of people are blaming the recession for it,
and I think that's definitely part of it.
Like there's an abundance of people
who didn't have jobs starting in late 2008, early 2009,
and it's kind of become the tradition to give people jobs
but not give them full-time jobs
because there's a lot of things you can get around
if you're an employer, as we'll talk about.
So the gig economy has developed
as a part of the recession,
but it's also developed because there's been a lot of tech,
there's been a lot of slow-paced government playing catch-up.
There's an abundance of workers, but it's nothing new.
The idea of kind of being paid as an independent contractor
working to fulfill a particular task
and just getting paid for the task,
which is kind of the basis of the gig economy,
that's actually pretty old from what I read.
Prior to the Industrial Revolution,
that's basically how most people made a living
unless you were like a highly skilled crafts person, right?
Like a brewer or a blacksmith or something like that.
A Smithy? A Smithy.
Yeah, I mean, things really changed at a certain point
where it went from that to you get a job for a company
and you work for that company for 45 years
and then you retire for that company.
Right, and they take care of you in retirement
and while you're working for them.
And that was really how things went for a long, long time
for like our grandparents' generation
and even to a certain degree, our parents' generation.
And things really, really changed again.
And now we kind of are back in this place
where the gig economy can mean a lot of things.
It can be, I mean, technically any freelancer,
like when I used to work as a film production freelance,
production assistant,
that's technically part of the gig economy.
Yeah, because you were paid for the gig.
You weren't like part of a company's,
you weren't a full-time employee with a company, right?
Yeah, but like when I hear gig economy these days
and I think most people associate
the modern 2019 usage of it,
you kind of think of the tech industry
and you think of being a driver for a rideshare company
or selling stuff on Etsy
or working for TaskRabbit or something like that.
Yeah, I mean, it's basically synonymous
with tech platforms that connect people
to consumers directly.
That's kind of, and gig economy,
I think that's a really good point.
When you use the term gig economy,
yeah, that basically describes
this modern incarnation of it.
But gig work, like you were just saying,
is it's been around for a very long time.
And like, remember all those temp services
like manpower and there was something.
I had temp for a little while.
Okay, so that's gig work too.
Basically, if you're a dog walker
and you go put a sign on a street pole
or a light pole at the corner
and you've got like the little tear offs
for your phone numbers.
Yeah, street poles.
That's basically working in the gig economy.
Now, if you took that street pole
with the little flyer that you made
and swapped it out for an app,
that's basically what we're living with right now.
Yeah, so here's a stat for you.
There are all kinds of stats for the gig economy.
But here's one from, in 2005,
the gig economy was about 10% of the US workforce.
And just 10 years later that had grown to about 16%.
And then just one year later in 2016,
24% of Americans reported earning some kind of money
from what they called the digital platform economy.
And that's what we're talking about
with like ride share or Airbnb
and task rabbit and stuff like that.
So that's a lot of people and that's,
we'll get into other stats later
about whether or not these are people
that are doing this little thing on the side
like I work my day job,
then I go drive for Uber at night
or basically more and more people are doing this
as their full-time job
without the benefits of being full-time employees.
And from the very sparse number of studies
that are actually like conducted on this gig economy
and the ramifications it holds,
those are the people who work full-time
in gig economy jobs, especially tech platform jobs.
They tend to be the most vulnerable
as far as workers go.
Yeah, so there's really a few,
well, there's three parts to this.
There's the platform companies that are,
I mean, it's kind of funny.
I guess it's genius in a way,
but all they're doing is connecting people.
Yeah, they're replacing those old like temp agencies.
And they're, but you don't have to go in and fill out stuff.
You just log on, create a profile and start.
So that's one appealing part of it too.
Yeah, so what they do is they're gonna draw
that direct line between you,
between the consumer and the producer.
So they, everyone who's ever done a ride share knows,
you just click on the little thing
and you can pay through the website
and they get whatever percentage of money they get the-
90, I think.
Is it 90%?
No.
No, no, no, the technology platform gets money
and obviously the gig worker gets money.
Right.
And all they're doing is facilitating that connection.
Right, but they're also one of the things
that these apps can do that is totally new
and revolutionary is that they can fulfill demand.
They can connect supply and demand in real time.
Yeah.
Like, you know, when you hail like a ride app
or hail a ride through an app,
I think is the way all the millennials put it.
Yeah, by the street bowl.
Right, you have just entered like this world
where you are saying, I need to ride right now.
And they say, oh, well, we have a car near you right now.
Let's send this person over.
Like it's real time demand that's being fulfilled.
Whereas if it were just that person who is in a car
and saying like, I could use some extra scratch,
I wanna take you somewhere, what are they gonna do?
Like just drive down the sidewalk and be like,
do you need a ride somewhere right now?
No, okay.
Do you need a ride?
Think about how much time that takes off of their plate.
And that's really the role that the platform performs
is connecting consumers with producers.
Yeah, and as far as being a gig worker,
there are a couple of big categories.
It's either sort of the,
if you don't necessarily have a college degree,
you might be on the lower income side of a gig worker,
which could be someone who delivers something to your home.
Or one of these services where you can call a handyman
to come over and do something like cut weeds
in your front yard.
Sure.
Or it can be on the very, very high side.
I got a list of the highest paying gig rates
and the very top one is something you probably know
a little about from your end of the world research,
but deep learning jobs.
Oh, really?
So the AI's?
115 bucks an hour.
Wow.
Yeah.
What is that, like consulting or something?
I think it's just any kind of AI specialization.
Gotcha.
Where that's the kind of rate you can command
on an hourly basis.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
Yeah, blockchain was number two at 87 bucks an hour.
Robotics, $77 an hour.
Number four was penetration testing jobs, which...
What is that?
What do you think?
Penetration testing jobs?
Give me your best guess.
I want to let's play a game.
Like allowing yourself to be punctured by stuff or shot at?
I mean, like that bullet works.
That needle's sharp.
Give me some money.
No, it obviously sounds dirty, but it's all it is.
It's like security to see if your security can be penetrated.
I got you.
I got you.
That makes sense.
That would be a cool gig.
You just get hired on to just mess with somebody's cybersecurity
and find weaknesses, right?
Yeah, but then it goes all the way down to number 10,
which was Instagram marketing at 31 bucks an hour.
Wow.
Wow.
That sounds made up, but wow.
It sort of does, but this is...
I mean, those are the highest paying gigs.
There was one film industry job in there,
Final Cut Pro editor, $37 an hour.
I can see that.
So those are on the high side, but I mean,
what are these drivers making?
Is this something like $12 an hour on average?
That's the national average after expenses,
but before whatever taxes they need to pay.
And they do need to pay taxes.
This is a hard lesson that some gig workers are finding
is that this isn't like tax-free money
just because the money's not so great
doesn't mean it's not tax-free.
Like you still have to pay taxes on this.
You still have to file like self-employment tax
in some areas, some cities, some counties, some states.
You have to have a business license.
There's a lot of hidden costs
that a lot of people don't know about.
And because as I was saying before,
governments from the local level up to the federal level
have been so slow to like pivot, I guess,
in Silicon Valley corporate speak
to this new reality of tech platform apps
that the gig economy functions on.
There's a lot of people out there who just are unlicensed,
who aren't paying taxes and who hopefully
will never find out the hard way that they did,
but maybe find out the easy way like through us
and then start and don't have to pay anything for back.
Yeah, and there are certain municipalities
and is that right, municipalities?
Man, you nailed municipalities.
The only way it could have been better Chuck
is if you'd done it with
a horribly stereotypical Italian accent.
Chew it, do it.
No, no, no, no, no.
Did you see that guy right in and said,
I sound like a cartoon chef on TV.
And I was like, oh, well, that's right.
I was like, you didn't think I was trying
to pull off a real accent, did you?
That's what I'm going for.
I wanted you to know what it sounded like
to hear Chef Boyer, do you know what?
Yeah, basically.
So a lot of counties now are getting involved though,
because, well, they say they want to help them transition
into the gig economy and learn to put away money,
to pay taxes and stuff, what they're really probably doing
is making sure that they pay their taxes.
Right, and it's not just counties that are getting
into it, states are, the federal government's kind of,
but it looks like it's starting to become
a patchwork of state regulations.
And we'll talk about that in a minute,
but first Chuck, why don't we take a break?
Let's do it.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
On the podcast, HeyDude the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show,
HeyDude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use HeyDude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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Listen to HeyDude, the 90s,
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The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
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Do you ever think to yourself,
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And it's like it's not true, I won't shock.
So, we were saying that there are,
the governments are starting to get into this finally,
years on, basically.
I mean, the gig economy itself
is many, many years old by now.
And they're just now starting to pass legislation.
But not all of it is, you know,
like on the county level,
putting up educational posters saying,
hey, you're a small business,
you need a license to do, you know,
to drive for Uber or whatever here.
It's not just that.
There's also a real frequently overlooked component
of the tech platforms that connect consumers and producers.
And that is that their profit margins
are based largely on getting around labor laws
that have been established throughout the 20th century.
And that are just outdated.
The tech platforms, the apps that connect people
were built up around those laws.
And they skirt the law very plainly.
I mean, there've been court rulings
and federal agency rulings to say, yeah, they're right.
Like these aren't employees,
these are independent contractors.
And so they don't get overtime,
they don't get unpaid,
or they don't get paid vacation time.
There's all this stuff that the health insurance
is a big one.
So that's a huge chunk of revenue or of outlay
that the companies who like Uber or TaskRabbit or whoever
don't have to shell out.
That means that's more profits for them.
And it's also something that their competitors
like cab companies say have to pay.
So it's one way that the cab companies lose
against the ride hailing apps.
But the people who are out there still need health insurance.
They still need health care.
They still need food.
And so the companies that make these platforms
tend to kind of offload the responsibility
that used to be on the company's part
onto local governments.
And so what local governments are trying to figure out
is like, well, with this influx of gig economy workers
saying like I need Medicare
or I need food stamps or something like that,
how can we deal with this?
And there've been some,
a couple of interesting proposals at least
for how to get the companies to pay for benefits
that companies traditionally have paid for,
but in this new gig economy.
Yeah, I thought this one was really interesting.
Portable benefits.
So, if you've ever changed jobs
or if you change jobs a lot on a full-time basis,
you know that it can be big pain
to your benefits are always changing.
Sometimes they're better, sometimes they're worse,
but they're bound to be different.
And that's just a hassle.
Oh yeah.
The idea of portable benefits basically
that you own as an employee.
So when you go to a new job as a gig worker,
you take your benefits with you
and basically just plug it into their system
and say, well, you are now gonna contribute
your employer portion to my portable benefits.
Yeah, it's kind of like the difference
between a 401K and an IRA, right?
The IRA is yours no matter where you go.
The 401K is between you and your employer.
Imagine if all you ever had was an IRA,
but your employer paid into that,
but it was for health benefits rather than retirement.
So it was always yours,
but just depending on who you worked for,
part of what you got paid was an additional premium
that was a contribution to your benefits,
whether it was a retirement package or dental
or vision or health or whatever.
And it was always you,
it was associated with you, the worker,
but everybody from each task paid into that.
It's a great idea and apparently it works too.
Yeah, and I'm not super sure this.
The other idea is that of a dependent contractor
rather than an independent contractor.
And that's basically if you receive
the majority of your income from one company,
then they need to do things like pay your health
or contribute toward your health insurance.
What I don't get is what's the difference
between that and being a full-time employee.
There's nothing.
It's basically just calling Uber out on its BS
and saying, these are your employees, dude,
without having to say, hey, federal government,
you guys need to revise the independent contractor laws
because this is different.
These are states or local governments saying,
you wanna do business here,
these people are dependent contractors
and you have to provide them with benefits.
Sorry, that's just the way it goes.
And if you get a big enough county or city or state
and the app or the platform wants to do business there,
they will do this and it stinks
and you have to have different people who are experts
in the different states you're doing business in.
But eventually, if enough different states
have slightly different laws that are all to the same effect,
companies like Uber are gonna go to the federal government
and be like, can you please pass a law that says
that we have to provide benefits for these people?
And maybe they're not the greatest benefits.
We don't wanna give away the farm,
but it will be more cost effective for us
to just have one standard to adhere to nationwide.
Then it will be to have 50 different laws
that we have to adhere to nationwide.
And how do they do that?
Through lobbyists paying tons of money.
It's true, but in this case, it would benefit people
but it's a ground up push from the local
and state governments basically agitating
for the federal government to take action.
Yeah, I mean, Uber certainly had its share
of missteps along the way.
Yeah, a few.
And even if you cast those aside and not to pick on them,
let's just talk about any app based gig economy
or gig job or whatever.
I guess gig is all you need to say really.
It's a mouthful, isn't it?
You can't help but just picture a back room,
board room in Silicon Valley with these dudes
just saying like, here's what we'll do.
We'll develop this app that connects people
and we take a cut and we're gonna have tens of thousands
of drivers all over the country working for us.
And then the other person goes, yeah, but man,
do you know how expensive that is with payroll
and this and that and insurance and everything?
Oh, no, no, no, the best part is they're not employees.
Right.
Like I'm sure that was the very first,
in the very first meeting, that was the big like,
oh, I get it and they all laughed.
Oh, I'm sure the room went breathless.
Yeah.
Like that's, it was literally world changing.
I mean, like that's the state of affairs now.
And yeah, it had to start somewhere.
I'm not sure where it started, but it started somewhere.
But like you said earlier, that is the, I mean,
and they've proven it with financials.
We're not just saying this stuff.
That is the reason they are profitable
is because they're not having to pay this dough.
Right.
And unfortunately, it's also the reason why people
who rely on gig work full time to make ends meet
and who are not, who don't have any kind of higher education
and are not skilled workers.
That's why they are increasingly turning to taxpayer funded
public assistance for things like healthcare and food
and basically making the ends meet.
Because from, like I said, the few studies
that there are out there, what they're finding is that
there's a segment of people who work in the gig economy
who cannot make ends meet with gig work.
And it's not just to pick on the platforms and the apps
that make up the backbone of the gig economy.
Because it says a lot that if there are people
and the vast majority of people who do gig work,
I think you said earlier, they don't work full time.
They do it to supplement income,
but they're not supplementing income.
I saw somewhere, somebody said,
they're not supplementing income to save up to go to Hawaii.
They're doing it to buy medicine and food and pay utility bills.
So that actually says a lot about the state of work
in general, not just gig work,
because if you have a regular job,
whether it's part-time or full-time,
and you have to have a side hustle,
which by the way is a term that's been around since 1950,
I saw.
Side hustle?
Yeah, there's a problem with work in general.
You know what I'm saying?
Where you cannot make ends meet
just with your regular full-time job
or even a couple part-time jobs.
So you have to do gig work too.
But the people who just do gig work,
those are the people who are the most vulnerable.
And they usually, if you're a driver,
you make about 1190 an hour.
That's the national average.
Yeah, here's some stats for you.
The Federal Reserve did a report,
and from 2018, 58% of full-time gig workers
said they would have a hard time coming up
with a $400 emergency bill.
Like if they had to go to the hospital and pay 400 bucks,
they couldn't cover that.
Nearly 60% of them.
Yeah, and that's compared to 38% of people
in just the regular economy, not the gig economy.
Right.
And they did surveys that said 5% of people said that gig
working, this is out of 11,000 people who did gig work at all.
5% of them said it was their main source of income.
Right.
Which is a pretty small amount, but that's growing.
I think between 2016 and 2021,
they're projecting it to grow from like 3.2 million people
to close to 10 million people,
like working gig economy jobs.
I saw somewhere 60 million, fast company predicted
something like 60 million Americans
are gonna be working in the gig economy by 2020,
which is far and away the highest number I saw.
Yeah, man, that's crazy.
But yeah, I've got another stat for you.
I saw, I think in Barons, I believe it's Barons,
the gig economy, gig work accounted for 94%
of net employment growth between 2005 and 2015.
So that means that all of the new jobs that came in
and all the old jobs that went away,
94% of the jobs that accounted for the growth of work
in America were gig work.
That's astounding, 94%.
Yeah, I mean, I feel like every time I go to publics,
25% of the people in there are shopping for other people.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
You can tell by their t-shirts.
Yeah, they wear the shirts
and Emily's done that a couple of times,
you know, too busy working parents.
She's, I can't remember the service that we use,
but I don't like it
because I like to chop for my own stuff.
I do too.
I don't want people picking out my food.
Yeah, when they bring the bag, you hold up an orange,
you're like, did you touch this?
This is not even that.
It's just, you know, you want to pick out your own stuff.
Yeah, I know. At least I do.
I'm just teasing.
I like running errands myself too.
And it feels like it's never right too.
They'll be like, oh, well, I couldn't find the thing.
So I got this.
Is there?
It's not what I asked for.
I saw Questlove, like hadn't had peanut butter,
cat and crunch and like forever.
And he posted something I think on Instagram
where he ordered some from like TaskRabbit or something.
And the guy brought him regular cat and crunch
and a jar of peanut butter.
He threw it down the hall of his hotel,
which I thought was a little much,
but it was a pretty good ending to the slideshow.
Might be pretty good though.
I did, I had a very, something very heavy to move
in my home recently that was just sitting there
because I couldn't get a friend over.
And I had never heard of TaskRabbit.
And someone said, you should try TaskRabbit.
And I did look up and I was like,
you get a young, strong man to come over
and lift something heavy for you in like an hour's notice.
And I was like, man,
I feel like I should probably just get this done.
And I got distracted and didn't do it
and was able to get friends over,
but I didn't even know it existed
and that you could get that kind of work.
Yeah, I think for TaskRabbit you can do just about anything.
And there's something in the UK,
there's a site called Fiverr, F-I-V-R, I think.
I've heard of that, I think.
And like every, like all tasks on it are for five bucks
or like whatever you want the person to do,
they'll either do it or won't do it,
but the price you pay is five bucks.
So it's like small, quick, easy tasks.
It's supposed to be.
Quite a wonder, what's worth $5?
Like you'll get my mail?
See if this needle's sharp.
I want to do a puncture test on you.
Back to that one again, huh?
I guess we should mention the strike
that happened earlier this month.
We're recording this in May, 2019.
Just very recently there was,
there were thousands of Uber and Lyft drivers
who went on strike, not just in May,
but kind of all year long,
this has sort of been brewing, I think.
And it sent Uber stock prices down for one.
Dude, by two thirds,
they started out with a $120 billion valuation
and ended up at the end of the day,
I think at $40 billion.
Yeah, and that's where this whole idea of like,
is it exploitation?
Like, because I mean,
the courts have roundly kind of said like,
no, you can't unionize, you're not employees.
Right.
And these are in some of the most liberal courts in the land.
Right, you're an independent contractor,
so you don't get overtime, you can't unionize.
There's all sorts of stuff that you just can't do
because you're an independent contractor.
And that's slowly starting to change.
Yeah, but the whole idea of this strike
is they're basically saying,
you have intentionally misclassified us as non-employees.
And I'm sure they're like, yeah, that's exactly right.
Right, I think that's like in our terms of use
that we intentionally misclassify you.
Well, they probably say we have intentionally classified you
as what you are, which is a non-employee,
but the drivers are saying they're misclassified, obviously.
Right, so there was a big lawsuit,
a few hundred thousand Uber drivers sued Uber
and they very recently settled, I think in March,
with like 13,600 of them.
Yeah.
And they were given $20 million to split between them,
which sounds like a lot,
but it's actually like less than 1,500 a driver
for basically saying we have been underpaying you.
The other like 300 something thousand drivers
didn't get squat because they all signed
an arbitration clause in their agreement,
which you should never sign if you have any say in it
whatsoever, because it basically says,
I can't sue and anytime I have a problem with you,
we will go to a mediator who you pay to decide
whether my claim has any value or not.
So it's a terrible, terrible thing to sign,
but on top of that, if you are a full-time gig economy worker,
you basically don't have a choice
and the company you're working with
as an independent contractor knows that.
So there's almost certainly going to be an arbitration clause,
but that's a really good example of what happens
when you sign an arbitration clause,
you lose out on the settlement
because you said that you are waiving your right to a trial.
Right, and aside from stuff like health insurance,
the drivers are angry because Uber in major cities
has been cutting driver pay rates
because they're trying to get their bottom line down
and say, hey, look everyone, look at our bottom line.
How attractive is this?
Yeah.
So like I was saying, this is slowly starting to change
thanks to regulation and we'll talk a little more
about that after this break.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
On the podcast, Paydude the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the co-classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends, and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
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This, I promise you.
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And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
There is like a Joshua on a shock.
So Chuck, New York really kind of changed things recently.
That one study, or a study, I don't know
if we talked about it yet.
The study with 11,000 people was conducted by the Fed.
Yeah.
There's another study conducted by,
I think you see Berkeley in the new school
and they basically found like most,
I think 58% of drivers driving for ride hailing apps
in New York City, not just Uber, but all of them,
especially the big four via Juno, Lyft and Uber.
58% of them work full-time.
So they're basically independent cab drivers
who are not licensed cabbies.
50%, I believe, have families
that they're supporting with that.
They're working for about 1190 an hour
and 40% of them qualified for Medicaid
and 18% qualified for food stamps.
And this was shocking enough to the city government
of New York that they passed the country's first,
and maybe the world's first as far as I know,
minimum wage law for ride hailing app independent contractors.
And it's actually more than the minimum wage
for New York in general.
Yeah, I mean, basically the New York came out and said,
first of all, Uber, they could fix this.
If they just had a very small fare adjustment
that passengers would probably not care about,
then they could pay them fairly and increase driver pay.
But since they're not gonna do that, we're gonna step in.
And I believe it was at this past January,
they were required to start paying drivers
after expenses, about $17.22 an hour,
which is about $5 more per hour
than the previous almost $12 per hour average.
Right, so that's a big deal.
And I mean, that was a huge win
for the independent contractors
who work for ride hailing apps, at least in New York,
but also it set a precedent across the country
basically saying like, yes, if you are a big enough town,
you have the clout to look out for these workers
who are being exploited by the tech platforms
that they're partnering with as independent contractors.
Yeah, and actually today, as we record this,
the state assembly in California passed legislation
that required employers to recognize gig workers
as employees with what they call the Dynamics.
It's the California State Supreme Court said in May 2018
that this three-part test called the Dynamics
would be used to determine
if contractors qualify as employees.
So to be exempt from labor requirements,
an employer would be required to prove that one,
its workers have complete control
over how services are provided.
So in other words, Uber can't give a minimum amount of hours
that you have to work or say you have to drive every Tuesday
or whatever, I'm not sure if they even do that, but...
No, I don't think they do.
And I think that's part of their argument
why they're not employers
because the worker sets their own schedule.
All right, and number two,
the services provided are not related
to the employer's main business.
So that's a big one.
Yeah.
Because that rules out all the, I mean, all the ride chairs.
Right.
Because they say that their main business
is app development.
Right, yeah, that is...
I'm not sure if that's a loophole.
Yeah, I don't know about that one either.
And then number three, the worker is engaged
in an independently established role.
So this is a big deal because other states,
a lot of states look to California
because this is where a lot of the gig economy,
the modern gig economy was born.
And this is sort of the first big California legislation
that's gone down the road.
Yeah, no, that is a big deal
because it's like that's their home court
making laws against them.
Yeah.
So that definitely kind of indicates like a turning tide.
And again, it's not just like governments looking out
for their citizens, although I'm sure that's part of it,
but it's also governments looking out
for their own bottom line
because those citizens are having to come
and say, I need healthcare again.
It's really important, frequently overlooked point.
But despite all that, and I mean,
you said it's easy to pick on Uber,
they're kind of a model for this kind of thing,
but they're certainly not the only ones.
But it also, when you just focus on that,
you miss out on the other aspect of the gig economy,
which is that it's a double-edged sword.
For some people, freelancing a gig economy
has allowed them to basically pursue their dreams
and become quite successful at doing what they wanna do
on their own terms, on their own schedule.
And there are supposedly a pretty decent amount
of people out there who are doing it that way,
but usually they're highly educated
and they work in a craft or an artistic
or kind of elite field, specialized field.
Yeah, like AI or robotics.
Sure, or if you are a consultant of some sort,
especially a very specialized consultant,
you don't have to spend the time and money
going out and drumming up business for yourself.
You can go to platforms like Upwork
and find people who are looking for the stuff that you do
way easier than before.
And that's a huge benefit of this gig economy.
It's become way easier to find work,
whether it's driving for a ride-hailing app
or being a marketing consultant.
Like it's from top to bottom,
it's easier to find work than ever.
Yeah, but it's also like,
the people are in these situations a lot of times
because they were unable to find the job
that they wanted on a full-time basis.
Right.
It is a very tough nut to crack
because even in rideshares, when you get in a car,
nine times out of 10, my driver is very happy
doing what they do and they always say pretty roundly,
like, oh, it's great, man, it's set my own hours.
And I mean, it sounds like,
I don't know if they're encouraged to say these things.
Right, yeah.
But it sounds like an ad for when you sign up,
because they kind of pair it exactly the things
that they try and entice you with,
which is you're your own boss and you set your own hours,
only drive when you want to.
But that is the deal.
And no one's forcing them to go do this
and you are putting money in their pocket.
I mean, I always tip super big.
That's, I think the only thing within your control
or not use these apps at all if you think they're evil.
Right, which is another way to look at it for sure.
But then all of a sudden, you know,
there's a lot of people that depend on that money
that are being hurt, it's tough.
Right, no, it is for sure.
Like that is another thing about the gig economy too,
is you can say like, well, I mean,
you're having trouble making ends meet,
I get to like hire you and like have an impact
on you being able to make ends meet.
Right.
Or it's just, it's such a first world thing to be like,
I'll forget all, you know, platforms and apps
because they exploit workers.
Well, they also help people make money
where they otherwise couldn't.
So there's like, it is very much a double edged sword.
There's definitely exploitation,
but there's also certainly an uplift
of the middle class that wasn't happening before.
There's also been an uptick in New York taxi driver suicides.
Really?
Yeah, that have long been blamed on rideshare
because it's put such a dent in taxi cab incomes,
driver incomes.
So I looked into that a little bit
and then found out this whole other world
about, you know, the whole deal with the taxi medallions.
Yeah, like people buy the medallions as like an investment
and then they like lease out the license to cabbies, right?
Yeah, we need to do a full show on that
because it is way more involved than I thought.
And I was gonna talk about it some here,
but it deserves its own episode.
All right, deal.
But they're saying that that is a big part
of the problem for the suicide rate as well.
It's sort of both of those things contributing.
Right.
So taxi medallions, look for that one.
Okay, that's a deal.
There's two other things in New York that I wanna point out.
Actually, two other platforms.
Two other things you wanna point out.
The Empire State Building is very nice.
Right, that's one.
And take your ride on the subway.
Right.
There's a cleaning service called MyClean.
That's like an app where they started out
with like the normal Silicon Valley model
where they just have independent contractors.
And they actually converted and started hiring
their contractors on as employees.
And there's another one called Hello Alfred,
which is kind of like a personal assistant,
a team of personal assistants
that you can basically involve in your life
as much or as little as you want.
What's it called?
Hello Alfred, it's just in New York
and it's only in certain buildings in New York
from what I can tell.
But they'll do everything from like
keep your plant alive to walk your dog,
to do your grocery shopping, to pick out clothes for you,
to have your shoes repaired, whatever.
Just basically keeping your life in order for you.
But because they try to anticipate
the things their customers need,
they realize that they need employees.
They need people they can have turnover and frequent training
and introducing their customers to new people.
They need people who are gonna be there for the long haul.
So they started out having employees too.
And that really kind of underscores a big reason
why having a full-time employment
is preferable to gig employment.
Especially if you're a company
because there's less turnover,
there's less training involved.
And usually the worker is a lot happier
when they have a steady full-time gig
and then that's their only job
and they get two weeks paid vacation every year
or more if you're in Europe.
And that has a benefit for the company
because that's the person who's communicating
with the public or making the stuff.
And they don't hate their life or their job.
So they're just producing better too
if you wanna look at the ickyest economic terms.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I thought so too.
Hello Alfred.
Yeah, I think you just became their spokesman.
Are you got anything else?
No.
I don't need, oh, there I do have one more thing.
Chuck, you ready?
Yes.
This whole peer-to-peer platform thing reminded me,
we have a Kiva team and I went and checked on it.
I did that just the other day.
So you saw what the big number we're approaching on
on total donations, I think you should take this one.
Well, you had the most recent number.
It was close to six million the other day.
Yep, still is.
It's really creeping up on $6 million
in total loans loaned out.
Dude, it had been a while too.
That's so funny, we both had that same thought.
Man, that's really something else.
Yep, so congratulations to the stuff
you should know Kiva team.
There are people joining.
I saw people joined yesterday.
So it's wide open if you want to learn more about it,
just search Kiva, K-I-V-A and stuff you should know.
And not only will our Kiva page come up,
but some blog posts we wrote about in the past come up too,
which is hilarious and quaint.
All right, well, since I said quaint, Chuck,
it's time I think for Listener Mail.
All right, I'm gonna call this tin pan alley follow-up.
I enjoyed that episode.
Me too.
Hey guys, if you asked me what tin pan alley was
prior to listening to this episode,
I would have said somewhere in New York
where music started to be popular,
and that's about all I could tell you.
And guys, I graduated with a Bachelor of Music
in Music Education.
What?
It's not that I'm so far out of college either
that I don't remember music history.
I'm only 25 and I'm finishing up my third year
teaching orchestra at a fourth, fifth and sixth graders.
Didn't even really know much about tin pan alley.
I know.
The last semester of music history in college
had to cover Late Romantic to Present Day,
which is over a century worth of music.
This was so much more interesting than the one slide
in music history class at 8 a.m.
I am one of many listeners sitting
in the DC Metro traffic.
So thank you for teaching me new things every day.
And that is from Consuelo Sevilla.
Not Sevilla.
No, it's...
She wrote back even.
Wow, two Ls?
Yeah, yeah.
She said, this is the Filipino pronunciation,
not the Spanish.
Gotcha.
So thank you, Consuelo.
Yeah, thanks a lot, Consuelo.
Glad to know we are rounding out your education
even after you graduated.
Yeah.
Well, it's kind of the purpose of the show, isn't it?
I think so.
Well, if you want to let us know
what you think the purpose of Stuff You Should Know is,
we're amorphous and wide open.
So let us have it.
You can go to stuffyshano.com
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Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom,
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to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called,
David Lacher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy, teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.