In the war over remote work, companies are turning full-time jobs into low-paying gigs

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'It's the Uberization of the workforce,' says Nicholas Bloom, a professor at Stanford University. 'The more remote you are, the more Uberized the job is, and the more you're just being paid for the day or for the week.'

Over the past three years, the American workplace has undergone all kinds of changes as a result of the work-from-home revolution. Perhaps the most widely discussed has been the way the remote age has prompted workers to emotionally detach from their jobs. Some bemoaned it as quiet quitting; others celebrated it as a much-needed correction to the toxic demands of.

For companies, offering full-time employment has always been expensive and risky. But there was one reason bosses were reluctant to outsource jobs: They couldn't imagine trusting people to get their work done out of sight. They supervised by way of butts-in-seats surveillance — checking that people were at their desks, typing away and making calls and furrowing their eyebrows in a way that suggested they were working hard. That ruled out contractors, because contractors work remotely.

Good or bad, the push to hire more part-time and contract workers will provide an overall boost to the economy. After all, for those who otherwise wouldn't have or couldn't have worked at all, a job — even if it doesn't come with all the perks of being a full-time employee — is better than no job at all. "It's probably going to increase labor supply by maybe 1% to 2%, which is actually a huge number," Bloom says.

Jessica Schultz, who founded a consultancy called Amplify Group last year, has been grappling with the tension between full-time employment versus gig work. One of the services Amplify offers is serving as a "fractional" chief revenue officer for early-stage companies that can't yet afford to bring one on full time. And her own staff, which is fully remote, consists primarily of part-time contractors, several of whom live in developing countries.

 

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