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Different status, same demands? The social policy preferences of platform workers in OECD countries

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Article

Chueri, Juliana ; Busemeyer, Marius

Competition & Change

2025

Early view

digital economy ; working conditions ; crowd work ; welfare state ; workers' compensation

OECD countries

Social protection

https://doi.org/10.1177/10245294251318440

English

Bibliogr.

"Platform work has introduced a new dimension of precarity in the labor market, as platform workers face high labor market risks and have limited access to social protection. The expansion of this employment status raises the question of whether platform workers have distinct social policy preferences from workers with similar socioeconomic backgrounds who are not employed in the platform economy. This paper empirically examines how and under what circumstances the social policy preferences of platform workers differ from those of other workers. We find that platform workers are more likely to demand more compensatory labor market policies than regular workers. Also, they are more likely to demand more social investment-type policies than regular and atypical workers who do not engage in the platform economy. We also find evidence for contextual effects: whereas welfare state generosity is associated with weaker demand from platform workers for compensatory labor market policies, it is associated with higher support for social investment. Our results suggest that the expansion of platform work will fuel demands for welfare expansion, specifically focusing on social investment."

Digital



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