Context:
The Economic Survey 2025–26 highlights the rapid growth of India’s gig economy alongside persistent income volatility, financial exclusion, and structural challenges, despite rising employment.
Key Highlights:
- Employment Growth
- Gig workforce grew from 77 lakh (2020–21) to 120 lakh (2024–25) (~55% increase).
- Periodic Labour Force Survey indicates fall in unemployment, partly due to platform-based work.
- Income & Financial Inclusion Concerns
- Around 40% of gig workers earn below ₹15,000 per month.
- Many face difficulties accessing formal credit due to thin credit files.
- Earnings are irregular, creating financial instability.
- Structural Reforms
- Deregulation, GST 2.0, and state labor reforms contributed to higher participation.
- Labour Codes aim to formalise work and improve protection, especially for women and gig workers.
- Algorithmic Governance
- Platforms control work allocation, monitoring, and wage calculation.
- Risks: algorithmic bias, burnout, unequal opportunity distribution.
- Regulatory oversight remains limited.
- Sectoral Spread
- Key sectors: Delivery, ride-sharing, freelancing, digital services.
- Trend: Informal jobs moving toward ecosystem-integrated roles.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Gig Economy: Labor market dominated by short-term, flexible, or freelance work.
- Labour Codes (2019–2020): Consolidation of 29 central labor laws into four codes: Wages, Industrial Relations, Social Security, and Occupational Safety & Health.
- Financial Inclusion: Access to financial services including credit, savings, insurance, and digital payment systems.
- Platform governance concepts (algorithms, rating systems, digital labour).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Labor Market Dynamics
- Gig economy: Flexible employment, lower entry barriers, rapid scaling.
- Issues: Job insecurity, income unpredictability, limited social security.
- Social Justice & Equity
- Gendered challenges: Women face barriers in flexible work due to safety and caregiving responsibilities.
- Financial exclusion limits upward mobility and savings potential.
- Policy & Governance
- Labour Codes expected to formalise gig work.
- Need for minimum wage, social security schemes, and algorithm transparency.
- Role of digital infrastructure in enhancing worker welfare.
- Economic Implications
- Growing gig workforce can support service exports, urban delivery, and platform innovation.
- Income volatility may limit domestic consumption and credit demand.
Way Forward:
- Introduce portable social security schemes for gig workers.
- Regulate platform algorithms to ensure fairness and transparency.
- Promote digital financial access and credit scoring for informal workers.
- Encourage skilling and career pathways within platform ecosystems.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS 2: Social justice, labor reforms, women empowerment.
- GS 3: Labor economics, employment trends, digital economy.
- Prelims: Labour Codes, gig economy, financial inclusion.
