Biden's Independent Contractor Rule Threatens the Evolution of Work
Much-desired flexibility for gig workers is in jeopardy.

The Labor Department's new Independent Contractor Rule went into effect Monday, threatening gig workers' independent status and the freedom and flexibility such workers have come to expect.
The new regulation imposes six criteria that employers must take into account when determining whether to classify a worker as an independent contractor or an employee—a distinction that for many businesses ultimately determines whether they can afford to hire the worker at all.
Independent contractor status grants workers greater liberty to choose their schedules, hours, mobility, and clientele, whereas the "employee" designation limits these freedoms in exchange for requiring employers to guarantee benefits, such as health coverage and paid time off. Independent contractors could still receive such benefits before the rule, and competitive gig companies often do offer workers similar perks. But by turning self-employed workers into corporate employees, the new rule turns those optional benefits into mandatory (and usually far less individualized) ones.
The major change, though, is that the rule stands to turn a sizable swath of workers into unionized employees—one of the ways in which President Joe Biden hopes to make good on his promise to become "the most pro-union president in American history."
One problem with the measure is that it's unclear whether any one of its six criteria "outweighs the other," making it impossible for businesses to gauge whether they are on the right side of the law. Though the Department of Labor claims the subjectivity of its standards—such as a worker's "skill and initiative," the "investments by the worker and potential employer," and the "nature and degree" of worker autonomy—is meant to grant employers agency over worker designations, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce alleges that these nebulous parameters are crafted with the opposite intention in mind.
To their point, the rule's sextet of definitive criteria concludes with a vague caveat: "additional factors may be relevant."
The new rule is constructed in such a way that "the only time [employers] can be confident is if they call a worker an employee," Marc Freedman, the Chamber's vice president of workplace policy, told the Associated Press. Larger companies like Lyft and Uber might have the resources to protect workers' independent contractor status and hash it out in court if need be, but smaller competitors are stuck between a rock and a hard place: less able to afford the legal risks, but unable to shoulder the costs of treating independent workers as employees either. The rule threatens to run them out of the market.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R–La.), who plans to introduce a resolution to repeal the rule, adds that the new regulations will bully employees as well. "Independent contractors…are shielded from forced or coerced unionization that would strip their flexibility away," Cassidy has said, making the self-employed a critical target "for large labor unions who want more workers paying forced union dues."
It makes sense that unions would be bullish on the Biden measure: In a 2022 McKinsey study, more than a third (36 percent) of the workers surveyed identified as independent contractors. That's a whopping 33 percent increase from 2016, suggesting that the portion of the American workforce forgoing the traditional 9-to-5 format in favor of self-employment is rising. That's a threat to these unions' business model.
A rule that restricts workers' independence is hardly a winning proposition among those it aims to protect. A Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) survey reveals that "fewer than 1 in 10 independent contractors would prefer a traditional work arrangement" to their current one, and that nearly 4 in 5 are happier to be self-employed than in a traditional corporate job. A Harvard Business Review study yields some insight as to why: 59 percent of the respondents cited workplace flexibility and autonomy as being more important than salary or other benefits.
It's not just workplace flexibility that the self-employed find so appealing: Pay still matters—and when it does, independence still wins. While the union-friendly outlet More Perfect Union alleges that the forthcoming rule "will mean higher wages and overtime pay for millions of workers in gig jobs, healthcare, construction, and more," the data tell a different story. According to the BLS, among full-time workers, independent contractors' median weekly earnings are nearly identical to those of traditional workers. Part-time independent contractors' median earnings are 30 percent higher than the median earnings of traditional part-time workers ($333 to $255).
Part of that might owe to the rigidity to which corporations must often adhere when setting employees' hours. Whether they're part-time or full-time, there are limits on just how much traditional employees can work in a given day or week, with few opportunities to put in an extra bit of hustle if they have a big car payment coming up—or, conversely, to take a little time off to deal with a stressful life event. In a review of the public comments made to the Labor Department following the rule's proposal, Quartz quoted a nurse who reported that "being able to work on the side as an independent contractor for [an] infusion company allows me to work extra without burning out."
No wonder that when the California State Legislature passed its infamous Assembly Bill 5 (on which the new Independent Contractor Rule is modeled), self-employment declined by 10.5 percent and California's work force shrank by 4.4 percent, on average, among affected occupations.
Meanwhile, the costs of both enforcing and conforming to the new rule could be staggering. Susan Houseman, a labor economist at the Upjohn Institute, notes that for the rule to be effective, it "must be coupled with enforcement—yet dollars (in inflation adjusted terms) for enforcement of such employment regulations have dramatically declined over the decades." With a sizable share of the population now identifying as independent contractors and with 40 percent of workers reporting that they had done some freelance work over the past year, cracking down on alleged worker misclassification could place a heavy burden on American taxpayers.
Consumers could also face higher prices as businesses struggle to foot the bill of transitioning their independent contractors to "employee" status. Reuters reports that businesses spend around 30 percent more for each employee than they do for every contractor.
So what's the advantage of reclassifying independent workers as employees? The same as the disadvantage: It makes it harder for workers to be their own boss, to choose their own schedules, to represent themselves, to set their priorities as they see fit. If you believe in the evolution of the workplace and worker self-determination, this is bad. But if you believe in a one-size-fits-all work model where individuals are employed by traditional businesses and represented by traditional unions, this is great.
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Now that I've returned to nursing, my wife and I have seriously considered going the independent contractor/travel nurse route. I would make ten to fifteen more dollars an hour. I know several nurses who do this. They work a contract for three or four months then take two to three months off, others will choose their contracts based on places they want to visit. Want to go to Hawaii or Alaska they are desperate for nurses and offering big contract for contract nurses, if you're doing 12 hours shifts (which are pretty much the standard anymore) you can work three or four days a week (four gets your overtime) and then have three or four days off to explore. Sign a two or three months contract and you'll get paid for playing. With the nursing compact my license is good in 26 states (and it isn't hard in most states to get your license endorsed there either in the states not in the compact). We've talked about doing short term local contracts in the winter and then doing a longer term contract in the summer, after the kids are out of school, and we can travel.
I'd go for it. I've known several contract nurses, who were making bank. (And I worked as an independent in a different line of business for decades.)
If you're prudent enough to manage your own finances (including the "self-employment tax") and can deal successfully with supervisors directly, there's no reason not to.
If the clients are willing to contract with an LLC or corporation then form one of those. Having an EIN on their file is preferable to an SSN.
B = threat. good start.
President Joe Biden hopes to make good on his promise to become "the most pro-union president in American history."
That may be, but as a Catholic married to a divorcee, who regularly takes communion and thus must be in a state of grace, Biden is also rabidly pro-abortion. As we are constantly reminded by such principled and enlightened types, the government needs to keep its laws off of our bodies. The last time I checked, my labor takes my body to produce anything. How exactly does Biden plan to square that circle?
The same way he squared the circle of requiring all employers with more than fifty employees to require the employees to take one vaccine.
Next up, all prior independent contractors forced to become employees must join the union.
for the rule to be effective, it "must be coupled with enforcement—yet dollars (in inflation adjusted terms) for enforcement of such employment regulations have dramatically declined over the decades."
That is by design. A rule that can be universally enforced is difficult to erect a protection racket around. The lack of funding is used to justify larger penalties levied against those on whom the rule is enforced. This incentivizes potential targets to proactively seek out protection, significantly reducing the amount of effort the racketeers have to contribute.
What you left out in referring to California's AB-5 is that the mostly left-wing "artists" quickly got themselves exempted from the independent contractor rules. More of the "rules for thee, but not for me" hypocrisy that reigns among the progressive elites.
2nd article today of how teh government doesn't like independent workers
No; the democrats don't like independence.
Lets go Brandon
Does it seem odd to anyone else that we never get to hear what the 6 criteria are?
I'm confused as to how the '6 criteria' are different from the '3 criteria' the state has been using for generations to determine this.
Democrats won't be satisfied until everyone who works for a living is either (a) a union member or (b) a government employee. (Preferably both, I think.)
In other words, all workers should be clients of the Democratic Party in one way or another.
I've never voted for Trump, nor plan to, but my guess is that stuff like this is one of the reasons he appeals to so many. And I can't blame 'em for hating the ever-metastasizing Administrative State.
Ya gotta hand it to thim looters. Both gangs of them sure know how to infiltrate, coerce, pollute and mess up anything the slightest bit libertarian or free-markety. Lookit all the chumps that abet and empower them flocking to Reason to fling ordure into each others' cages!
Well duh... The tyranny can't be totalitarian when the [Na]tional So[zi]alist - Empire has people who are exempt of their tyranny.
>whereas the "employee" designation limits these freedoms in exchange for requiring employers to guarantee benefits, such as health coverage and paid time off.
Griffiths - have you ever worked a job in your life? Employers are not required to give employees health coverage or paid time off (well, maybe a little bit of the latter under law). The vast majority don't.
There is, literally, nothing that the status of 'employee' gets you - in fact, being an 'employee' makes you *worse off* than an independent contractor.
In both situations, you're not guaranteed anything except a very low legal minimum of benefits. You're not getting any extra legal protections. And in both cases you can be let go without warning - or just put on 'zero hours'.
You people need to stop pretending that 'employee' is a status that gives *any* protection - it doesn't. When you can start to make people understand *that*, then you'll be able to change minds.
But you can't do that until *you* understand it.
I'm going to disagree.
Depending on the size of the company and the hours you work, Obamacare requires the company to provide health insurance, for one. I think the threshold is 50 employees right now.
I've been severely affected by that very mandate. A decade back I found it much harder to book contract work than when I ran the same consulting business in the '00s, and a large part of that was because companies feared the penalty for paying me more than part time hours.
Almost immediately, places like Target and Wal Mart switched to part time only for the majority of their workers, again because of the mandate to provide full time employees with health care.
I know what you're getting at. I think you've gone a bit overboard in your criticism is all.
Are you exempt from this law if you bake bread?
It’s the yeast they can do.
Only in California. And if you know a certain someone.
You are just trying to get a rise out of people who prefer to loaf around.
Another reason to force everyone into an employee work situation is that it's much easier for the IRS to track and withhold income on one W-2 than several 1099s.
Follow the money.