TY - JOUR
T1 - Accidental flexicurity or workfare?
T2 - Navigating ride-share work and Australia's welfare system
AU - Veen, Alex
AU - Barratt, Tom
AU - Goods, Caleb
AU - Baird, Marian
PY - 2024/8
Y1 - 2024/8
N2 - This mixed-methods study explores the intersection of the 'gig' economy and welfare state in Australia, exploring how ride-share work has provided a pathway into paid work for three traditionally disadvantaged groups: individuals with disability, with caring responsibilities, or aged 45 and over. It examines these workers' motivations for the work and explores how the welfare system shapes their experiences. The study finds push factors, such as past labour market discrimination and limited alternatives, and pull factors, like the relative flexibility of the work, which allows for the accommodation of planned and unplanned absences, are driving individuals into the 'gig' economy. The authors identify a duality about these experiences. On the one hand, the work represents a de facto form of 'workfare'. On the other, the welfare system is cushioning the work's job and income insecurity, providing individuals with flexibility and security unavailable elsewhere, an unintended policy outcome the authors label 'accidental flexicurity'.
AB - This mixed-methods study explores the intersection of the 'gig' economy and welfare state in Australia, exploring how ride-share work has provided a pathway into paid work for three traditionally disadvantaged groups: individuals with disability, with caring responsibilities, or aged 45 and over. It examines these workers' motivations for the work and explores how the welfare system shapes their experiences. The study finds push factors, such as past labour market discrimination and limited alternatives, and pull factors, like the relative flexibility of the work, which allows for the accommodation of planned and unplanned absences, are driving individuals into the 'gig' economy. The authors identify a duality about these experiences. On the one hand, the work represents a de facto form of 'workfare'. On the other, the welfare system is cushioning the work's job and income insecurity, providing individuals with flexibility and security unavailable elsewhere, an unintended policy outcome the authors label 'accidental flexicurity'.
KW - Atypical employment
KW - Disadvantaged workers
KW - Flexicurity
KW - Gig economy
KW - Welfare system
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001075649700001
U2 - 10.1177/0143831X231197057
DO - 10.1177/0143831X231197057
M3 - Article
SN - 0143-831X
VL - 45
SP - 766
EP - 793
JO - Economic and Industrial Democracy
JF - Economic and Industrial Democracy
IS - 3
ER -