Sleepless in the Gig Economy
The life of a gig-worker can keep you up at night
Podcast

Nelson Antoine / Shutterstock.com
April 19, 2022
With the advent of the New Deal, employers were expected to guarantee workers a measure of security — a fair wage, a reasonable number of hours, benefits like retirement and health insurance. Recent years have seen a rise in “non-standard” work arrangements — independent contractors and gig workers who work without benefits or job protections. Gig-work platforms offer workers the tantalizing promise of flexibility and freedom.
Gig-work platforms make the tantalizing promise of flexibility and freedom. But that can come at a deceptively steep price for many gig workers: low and variable wages, unpredictable schedules, and paltry benefits. Trying to make a living this way is also enormously stressful —one study of gig workers found that the more employment insecurity they experienced during the day, the more their nights became fitful, sleepless and anxiety-ridden.
The podcast is a partnership of New America and Slate, and sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Subscribe to get all the new episodes on Slate, Apple podcasts, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts
Guests
- Cherri Murphy, a pastor and former ride-share driver, now trying to organize workers with Gig Workers Rising.
- Quan D. Mai, an assistant professor of sociology at Rutgers University who has published several articles on the new normal of gig work.
Resources
- After the Gig: How the Sharing Economy got Hijacked, Bergguen Institute’s Future of Capitalism & the Platform Cooperativism Consortium
- A Brief History of the Gig, Veena Dubal, 2020
- The battle for the future of “gig” work, Sarah Jaffe, Vox
- Rideshare Drivers United
- Why Precarious Work Is Bad for Health: Social Marginality as Key Mechanisms in a Multi-National Context, Macmillan, Shanahan, 2021
- Gig Economy in the U.S. – Statistics and Facts