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Uber Drivers and Other Gig Economy Workers Are Earning Half What They Did Five Years Ago (recode.net)

According to a new study by the JPMorgan Chase Instittue, drivers who transport people via apps (e.g. Uber, Lyft, Uber Eats, Postmates) made 53 percent less in 2017 than they did in 2013. Recode reports: The average monthly payments to those who worked for a transportation app in a given month declined to $783 from $1,469. Meanwhile, people working for leasing apps -- Airbnb, Turo, Parklee and other apps that let you rent assets like your home, car or parking space -- saw their incomes from those platforms rise 69 percent to $1,736 on average.

This is happening as online gig work has become more popular, thanks in large part to the growth in the number of transportation jobs. The share of the working population that has participated in the online gig economy at any point in a year rose from less than 2 percent in 2013 to nearly 5 percent in 2018. There are a number of potential reasons why the average pay for gig economy drivers has gone down. It could be any or all of the below, according to JPMorgan: drivers on average are working fewer hours; demand hasn't increased to meet the increased number of drivers; trip prices have fallen; or platforms are paying drivers lower rates.

3 of 153 comments (clear)

  1. No shit by viperidaenz · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's a race to the bottom. The more "gig economy workers" there are, the lower the rates will be.
    Instead of the traditional impact being company profit margins, it's peoples wages that are shrinking.

  2. 783 dollars monthly average.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    from that, you have to pay:

    1. fuel, tires, and other maintenance and repair items..

    2. cost and depreciation of the vehicle..

    3. taxes (income, social security, medicare, etc) and vehicle registration/inspection fees and taxes..

    4. insurance (commercial use, passenger-for-hire. i.e. it ain't cheap).

    what was that? you ran out of money at #2? not my problem. sucks to be you, i guess. get a real job maybe?

  3. Re:That's not necessarily true either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    The study mentions that:

    These declines in monthly earnings among drivers may reflect the fact that the growth in the number of drivers could have put downward pressure on hourly wages; they may also reflect a potential decline in the number of hours drivers are driving. In our data, we do not observe wages and hours separately; we see only their product, earnings.

    However, other research provides some clues. Some calculations of hourly wages
    on a very large transportation platform—Uber—indicate that trip prices fell between 2014 and 2016, but the number of trips per hour increased, resulting in stable hourly wages (Hall et al, 2017; Hall, 2018).

    To our knowledge, there is no published time series information on average hours worked among drivers on any single platform or across all platforms. However, research into tax reporting indicates that self-reported costs by new drivers fell 41 percent between 2013
    and 2015, whereas self-reported earnings fell 46 percent (Abraham et al, 2018). Since a significant fraction of these costs is likely to comprise variable costs (vehicle maintenance and fuel), the decline could reflect a reduction in hours, as well as the decline in fuel prices that occurred during this period. The fact that earnings declined more than costs, however, suggests that effective wages also fell.