"A proposal with widespread political support would entitle
drivers and couriers for companies like Uber to a minimum wage and legal
protections.
LONDON — In one of the biggest challenges yet to the labor
practices at popular ride-hailing and food-delivery services, the European
Commission took a major step on Thursday toward requiring companies like Uber
to consider their drivers and couriers as employees entitled to a minimum wage
and legal protections.
The commission proposed rules that, if enacted, would affect
up to an estimated 4.1 million people and give the European Union some of the
world’s strictest rules for the so-called gig economy. The policy would remake
the relationship that ride services, food delivery companies and other
platforms have with workers in the 27-nation bloc.
Labor unions and other supporters hailed the proposal, which
has strong political support, as a breakthrough in the global effort to change
the business practices of companies that they say depend on exploiting workers
with low pay and weak labor protections.
Uber and other companies are expected to lobby against the
rules, which must go through several legislative steps before becoming law. The
companies have long classified workers as independent contractors to hold down
costs and limit legal liabilities. The model provided new conveniences for
traveling across town and ordering takeout, and gave millions of people a
flexible new way to work when they want.
But in Europe, where worker protection laws are
traditionally more robust than in the United States, there has been growing
momentum for change, particularly as the pandemic highlighted the fragile
nature of gig work when food couriers and others continued to work even amid
lockdowns and rising Covid-19 cases.
While there have been some important legal victories and
laws passed in some countries targeting Uber and others, the policy released by
the European Commission, the executive branch of the European Union, is the
most far-reaching legislative attempt to regulate companies to date.
The rules would affect drivers, couriers, home cleaners,
home health care aides, fitness coaches and others who use apps and online
platforms to find work. As employees, they would be entitled to a minimum wage,
holiday pay, unemployment and health benefits, and other legal protections
depending on the country where they worked.
“New forms of work organization do not automatically translate
into quality jobs,” Valdis Dombrovskis, the bloc’s commissioner for trade, said
as he presented the new rules. “People involved in platform work can sometimes
find themselves exposed to unsafe living and working conditions.”
The European Union estimates that 28 million people work
through digital labor platforms in the bloc, with their number expected to grow
to 43 million by 2025. The commission said on Thursday that 5.5 million workers
were at risk of what it called misclassification, and that up to 4.1 million of
them could be reclassified as employees through the directive.
“This is not just bike riders in big cities,” said Johanna
Wenckebach, a lawyer and scientific director at the Hugo Sinzheimer Institute
for Labor and Social Security Law in Germany. “This is a phenomenon with
millions of workers and many more ahead.”
The rules are part of a broader digital agenda that European
Union leaders hope to pass in the coming year. Proposals include tougher
antitrust regulations targeting the largest tech companies, stricter content
moderation rules for Facebook and other internet services to combat illicit
material, and new regulations for the use of artificial intelligence.
The new labor rules follow a landmark case in February, when
Britain’s top court ruled that Uber drivers should be classified as workers
entitled to a minimum wage and holiday pay. In the Netherlands, a court ruled
in September that Uber drivers should be paid under collective rules in place
for taxi drivers.
Supporters of the new worker regulations said companies like
Uber behave like employers by controlling workers through software that sets
wages, assigns jobs and measures performance — a practice the commission called
“algorithmic management.”
The new European rules would require companies to disclose
more about how their software systems made decisions affecting workers. For
those who may remain independent, the new rules would also require companies to
grant more autonomy that self-employment entails.
The policy threatens the business models of Uber and other
platforms, like the food delivery service Deliveroo, that already struggle to
turn a profit. The E.U. law could result in billions of dollars in new costs,
which are likely to be passed on to customers, potentially reducing use of the
apps.
Uber opposes the E.U. proposal, saying it would result in
higher costs for customers. The company said roughly 250,000 couriers and
135,000 drivers across Europe would lose work under the proposal.
Rather than help workers, Uber said the proposal “would have
the opposite effect — putting thousands of jobs at risk, crippling small
businesses in the wake of the pandemic and damaging vital services that
consumers across Europe rely on.”
Just Eat, the largest food-delivery service in Europe, said
it supported the policy. Jitse Groen, the company’s chief executive, said on
Twitter that it would “improve conditions for workers and help them access
social protections.”
The E.U. rules are being closely watched as a potential
model for other governments around the world. Negotiations could last through
2022 or longer as policymakers negotiate a compromise among different European
countries and members of the European Parliament who disagree about how
aggressive the regulations should be. The law is unlikely to take effect until
2024 or later.
Enforcement would be left to the countries where the
companies operated.
The policy contrasts Europe with the United States, where
efforts to regulate app-based ride and delivery services have not gained as
much momentum except in a few states and cities.
Last year, gig economy companies staged a successful
referendum campaign in California to keep drivers classified as independent
contractors while giving them limited benefits. Although a judge ruled in
August that the result violated California’s Constitution, his decision is
being appealed, and the companies are pursuing similar legislation in
Massachusetts.
The Biden administration has suggested that gig workers
should be treated as employees, but it has not taken significant steps to
change employment laws. In May, the Labor Department reversed a Trump-era rule
that would have made it more difficult to reclassify gig workers in the country
as employees.
In Europe, Spain offers a preview of the potential effects
of the E.U. proposal. The country’s so-called Riders Law, enacted in August,
required food delivery services such as Uber and Deliveroo to reclassify workers
as employees, covering an estimated 30,000 workers.
Uber responded by hiring several staffing agencies to hire a
fleet of drivers for Uber Eats, a strategy to comply with the law but avoid
responsibility for managing thousands of people directly. Deliveroo, which is
partly owned by Amazon, abandoned the Spanish market.
The companies prefer policies like those in France, where
the government has proposed allowing workers to elect union representation that
could negotiate with companies on issues like wages and benefits. Uber also
pointed to Italy, where a major union and food delivery companies struck a deal
that guarantees a minimum wage, insurance and safety equipment, but does not
classify the workers as employees.
Kim van Sparrentak, a Green lawmaker in the European
Parliament who helped draft a report on platform workers that was published
this year, praised the commission’s proposal as “quite radical.”
“It can set a new standard for workers’ rights,” Ms. Van
Sparrentak said.”"
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