Pat Conaty writes:
In today’s
labour market, uncertainty is the new normal.
Casual work, temping, zero hour
contracts and diverse forms of self-employment are characteristic of this
brave new world of “precarious work”.
Some 4.6 million today are
self-employed (15 per cent of the workforce) and since 2008 they have created
two-thirds of new jobs.
The record rise of self-employment is unprecedented. By
2018 it is expected that more people will be in self-employment than in
public sector jobs.
While a proportion of the
self-employed do well financially, they are today the exception.
Indeed the stereotype of the self-employed as small businesses is less
true than ever before.
We know 83 per cent of the UK
self-employed work alone. Average earnings are far too low to employ anyone
else.
The median annual income of the self-employed plummeted from £15,000 in
2008 to £10,400 in 2013.
Low pay however is only part of
the picture.
An absence of worker rights and support services aggravates
hardship and makes matters worse.
Under EU regulations, temporary
and agency staff are entitled as “workers” to sickness and holiday pay.
This is not the case for self-employed as the Not Alone report highlights.
By
contrast with other workers, most self-employed people bear the full costs
for office space, tools and equipment, heating and lighting, workplace
insurance and pension savings.
They also have to put in days of work
unpaid for bidding, negotiating contracts, tax and national insurance administration,
billing, accounts management and debt collection.
How can self-employed workers
overcome lop-sided risks, over-bearing costs and additionally secure fair
trade terms and conditions?
To avoid “walking alone”, some freelancers
are rediscovering solidarity, co-operation and the logic of mutual aid.
Trade unions in the media sector in Germany, Scandinavia and the UK have
been demonstrating ways to do this.
The Federation of Entertainment
Unions (FEU) is the UK network of trade unions in media.
Members include
the National Union of Journalists, BECTU, Equity and the Musicians Union;
all have a high proportion of self-employed members.
A common FEU strategy is
to secure “worker status” for their freelance members and then to negotiate
worker rights.
Co-operatively owned employment
agencies can provide the operational means to achieve this outcome and
especially if backed by a trade union.
For example, faced by rising agency
fees, 50 music teachers in Swindon formed a co-op to market their services
to schools, to assist with negotiations and to provide other collective
services.
The Musicians Union and Co-operatives UK have jointly promoted
this strategy and music supply teachers in many other regions have done
the same.
Likewise actors’ co-ops have steadily
expanded to 30 in England and Wales. Through their Co-operative Personal
Management Association they work closely with Equity, the actors’ union.
Co-operative innovators in France
and Belgium have developed integrated services for self-employed workers in
relation to affordable workspace, back office services, debt collection,
low-cost insurance and for securing sickness and benefit payments from the
state.
These business and employment co-operatives pioneers include the
CAE network in France with 72 local co-operatives and Smart in Belgium – a
co-operative with over 60,000 members.
In the US, new union co-ops are
emerging. Under a joint agreement, the US Steelworkers, the largest union
in the US, and the successful Mondragon Co-operatives from Spain are
co-developing the model.
Union co-ops are being set up in a range of industries
and cities from Pittsburg to Los Angeles.
In Cincinnati, Ohio, there are
seven union co-ops including a food hub, a railway manufacturer, a “green
laundry” and a jewellery manufacturer.
The Freelancers Union in the US
has developed as a mutual to provide insurance and other legal and
advocacy services for more than 280,000 members.
In Holland and in Spain,
general unions for the self-employed have emerged and developed since the
1990s. UPTA in Spain has 100,000 members.
To help secure rights for
self-employed workers, the International TUC, the ILO and
the International Co-operative Alliance have developed an organisers’
handbook.
Solidarity economy strategies are growing but are still
fragmented.
Bringing together best practice internationally could trigger
a new game plan that might snowball by bringing together solidarity solutions.
The trade union and co-operative movements need to unite their efforts to
make this happen.
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