My Best Friend Lost His Life to the Gig Economy

Ya' Cousin Cleon

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Pablo Avendano was struck and killed on his bicycle in Philadelphia while working for the San Francisco–based food-delivery startup Caviar. Within a few short days of his death, a banner appeared near the scene at 10th and Spring Garden reading simply, “The Gig Economy Killed Pablo.” This wasn’t just hyperbole, and the questions raised by his death—and the gig economy as a whole—remain unanswered today. Pablo—whom I will call by his first name—was a close comrade and friend with whom I had organized for years, and until his death, he was my roommate as well. Our daily conversations offered a glimpse into the reality of today’s “gig economy,” in which intensifying exploitation masquerades as choice.

This is nothing new. From the beginning, capitalism has been based on a false choice: unlike feudalism, workers under capitalism are formally free to sell their labor on a free market. It’s not hard to spot the lie: If you don’t choose to do so, you starve. The choice is a false one, because workers have little control over the conditions of their labor and which choices are on the table to begin with. So the labor movement has historically fought to transform those conditions, winning important concessions around wages, health and other benefits, injury compensation, and union rights.

In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, however, flexibility and choice became code words for a shock doctrine that took advantage of the crisis to override or bypass workers’ protections entirely through a massive vanishing trick: With a flash and a puff of smoke, workers were no longer workers, but instead independent contractors. This legal loophole meant that they qualified for no benefits or protections and were simply opting into a “sharing economy” in which everything is shared—risk, social cost, medical expenses—everything but the profits, of course. The “gig economy” was born.

False choice is dispersed throughout this gig economy and taken to new extremes, epitomized by an absurd headline declaring that “Young people have embraced the gig economy.” In the wreckage of the post-2008 economy, millennials and others—student loans dwarfing their job prospects—were left scrambling for whatever work they could find and couldn’t afford to be picky. So now we “choose” whether or not to sell our labor, but we also “choose” when to do so, which gigs to accept and which to refuse, whether to work from home or not. But we still don’t get to choose the conditions under which those choices are made. Instead, those conditions are naturalized. It’s just the way things are: Your home is a hotel, your car is a taxi, and your bike is not for recreation anymore.

Founded in 2012, Caviar, like many of the food-delivery services that have invaded cities, is emblematic of a gig-economy business model that distributes social costs and risk onto the broader community. As one articleabout Pablo’s death puts it: “Caviar workers injured on the job often fall back on aging parents or adult siblings for housing when they can’t ride. Most Caviar workers depend on the goodwill of bicycle mechanic friends or sympathetic bike shops to keep them rolling (and thus eating) as their bicycles wear out from near constant use. This is all labor that maintains their workers, for which Caviar’s business model shirks responsibility.”

To be sure, working as a bike courier meant enduring dangerous and even abusive conditions long before the rise of the gig economy. For decades, the industry took advantage of a “vulnerable” workforce often made up of those with “murky immigration statuses, a willingness to work for tips alone and a fear of blowing the whistle on mistreatment,” as The New York Timesreported in 2012. But with the rise of the gig economy—sometimes (and more accurately) described as the “on demand” economy—these abuses have spread and accelerated, with Caviar and other companies profiting off the vulnerability of independent contractors much the way independent restaurants have long profited off the vulnerability of unprotected and undocumented communities.

For more than two years as a Caviar courier, Pablo confronted this reality—a reality of vulnerability and false choice—on a daily basis. He had to wake up and decide whether to risk life and limb for a job with low pay and no benefits—making about $100 on a good shift, but as little as $30 on a bad one. But the alternative was not being able to pay the rent.

Conditions at Caviar weren’t always so challenging, couriers have said. One anonymous courier familiar with Caviar logistics in multiple cities explained how, as a young start-up, the company had made all its deliveries for a $9.99 flat fee, but by 2014—when Caviar was acquired by Square—it began operating on an algorithm-based model that claims to instantaneously match the supply of couriers with the demand for deliveries. As with Uber, Lyft, and other algorithm-based companies, Caviar enjoys an “immense data advantage” over customers and workers alike, with the algorithm functioning as a sort of proprietary black box offering delivery payments that couriers can only accept or reject, but not question. (That lack of transparency recently landed the company in the crosshairs of a class-action lawsuit in which customers charged that Caviar had collected gratuities from them but not passed the tips on to couriers. Caviar settled for $2.2 million but denied the allegations.)

The result has been a sort of race-to-the-bottom in which couriers—Pablo included—told me that they had to work longer hours and ride faster to make more deliveries: In other words, they had to take more risks. Some have even argued that Caviar incentivizes dangerous work in inclement conditions. When there was bad weather, like the day Pablo was killed, couriers might receive a peppy, emoji-adorned message. (“When it rains the orders POUR on Caviar!… Go online ASAP to cash in!” read a text received by another courier the day before Pablo died.) For couriers already struggling to make a living, it only made sense to work when conditions were bad, making an already dangerous job downright treacherous.

When contacted for comment, Caviar disagreed with these claims. In an email to The Nation, a spokesperson wrote that “Couriers choose to deliver with Caviar because it offers them flexibility and choice over where, how, and when to earn money. Caviar pays couriers very competitively because they have many options to choose from,” adding that average earnings for Caviar couriers is over $20 “per engaged hour.” While the spokesperson did not respond directly to the suggestion that Caviar incentivizes working in dangerous conditions, they insisted that, “During busy times—like dinner, Sunday nights, or events like the Super Bowl—Caviar offers couriers the opportunity to earn more money because we know their services are in high demand and they have many platforms to choose from.”

As it got harder and harder to eke out a living with Caviar, Pablo knew he needed to find an alternative, and for the past year he had been pursuing certification as a Spanish-language interpreter. But in the meantime, he had to work more and longer hours—often split shifts totaling more than six hours—assuming more risk in the process and often returning home to study for his interpreting exam only to be too exhausted to do so. In the gig economy, the trade-off between working more gigs and finding a way to escape is too much for many to navigate. But failing to do so proved fatal for Pablo.

Cliff notes: workers dying in this economy, and it ain't gonna get no better any time soon
 

Professor Emeritus

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Wealthy people who control capital are finding more and more ways to spend less and less on workers, and then reframe the effort as "employee choice".

So long as we continue to believe that profits are the greatest moral good and that people with the most capital should have the most say in how everyone lives their lives, this trend will only get worse.
 

Slystallion

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Pizza delivery guys in New York have the same risk...has very little to do about gig economy...any bike or car truck delivery job puts you at a higher risk of collision
 

Ghost Utmost

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If you ride a

GOT DAMNED BICYCLE

Where CARS are supposed to drive

Then you're talking your life into your hands each time you hop on that mf

I would find something else to do because I already know that riding a fukcing bike in traffic is not very safe

I won't even get on a motorcycle or moped

I read the article enough to become annoyed at the idea that people are being FORCED to do shyt like this

Do not do dangerous jobs for MOTHER FUKCING $9 PER HOUR

Find something else to do
 

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If you ride a

GOT DAMNED BICYCLE

Where CARS are supposed to drive

Then you're talking your life into your hands each time you hop on that mf

I would find something else to do because I already know that riding a fukcing bike in traffic is not very safe

I won't even get on a motorcycle or moped

I read the article enough to become annoyed at the idea that people are being FORCED to do shyt like this

Do not do dangerous jobs for MOTHER FUKCING $9 PER HOUR

Find something else to do


Even worse is when a yuppie is swerving through traffic during rush hour with a fukking 3 year old in the back seat of the bike.

Makes me wanna do something violent to the idiot parent.
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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So long as we continue to believe that profits are the greatest moral good and that people with the most capital should have the most say in how everyone lives their lives, this trend will only get worse.
So theres no inbetween? You are either for the worker or 100% a worshipper at the altar of capitalism :dahell: Way to open the floor for an exchange of different viewpoints
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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If you ride a

GOT DAMNED BICYCLE

Where CARS are supposed to drive

Then you're talking your life into your hands each time you hop on that mf

I would find something else to do because I already know that riding a fukcing bike in traffic is not very safe

I won't even get on a motorcycle or moped

I read the article enough to become annoyed at the idea that people are being FORCED to do shyt like this

Do not do dangerous jobs for MOTHER FUKCING $9 PER HOUR

Find something else to do
Bikes have the same right to the road as cars. This is a BS argument.

But the notion that Pablo's only choices were to be a bike courier or starve is also a lie. Article opens with the framing of capital as a lie and then presents this story enshrouded in another one. The intellectual dishonesty is :scust:
 
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