Problem at Uber
Introduction
Uber has 22,000 employees worldwide and approximately half of its employees work inside the US. The company has nearly 1 million drivers in the US and approximately 4 million worldwide (Sainato, 2019). The problem that Uber has is that it does not consider its drivers as actual employees even though this categorization has been challenged at the federal level. Regulators have argued in the past that the company should count its drivers as employees rather than as freelancers or contractors. Drivers too have argued that they deserve the benefits, protections and compensation that regular employees receive (Rapier, 2019). However, the National Labor Relations Board's general counsel recently revealed that Uber’s drivers will continue to be classified as contractors. Though the company has viewed this as a victory for its business model, there are plenty of problems that remain as a result of this continuation of what many drivers view as an inappropriate classification. This paper will address the issue at the heart of this problem and describe why it is one that needs to be solved. It will discuss the qualitative design used to collect data using the interview method and will present the findings from three interviews with local area Uber drivers. Finally it will conclude with a reflection from a Christian perspective on how Uber should address its driver employment status issue.
The Main Problem
The main problem that Uber has is that its drivers who commit themselves full-time to driving for Uber feel unable to earn a just wage because the company has been allowed to classify them as contractors instead of as employees. It is akin to a company like Nike outsourcing all its production work to wage slaves in Asia. Uber has found a legal loophole that allows it to classify its drivers as contractors, meaning it does not have to provide any of the benefits, support or oversight that comes with having drivers the company employs. Those who drive for the company only part-time have no problem with the arrangement: it is the ones who rely upon the work full-time who feel exploited and rightly so. Uber has displaced the traditional taxi cab business model and undermined the taxi driver’s occupation with its app business that contracts out driving services to independent drivers.
There are indirect issues with Uber’s business, too, including the problem of sexual assaults that have occurred among Uber drivers. Between 2018 and 2019 there 6000 sexual assault claims involving Uber drivers or passengers (Bond, 2019). Because of the lack of oversight that Uber has and the lack of discretion it conducts in outsourcing driving services to anyone with a car, the company puts both drivers and passengers at risk (Bhuiyan, 2018).
Primary Cause of the Problem
The primary cause of the main problem of Uber’s drivers’ employment status is the fact that to be competitive and to differentiate itself from traditional taxi cab companies, Uber had to exploit the share economy and get contractors to provide driving services to riders. People looking for an easy way to earn extra cash on the side were happy with the idea. They did not have to undergo an evaluation or hiring process. They did not have to sit for interviews. All they had to do was download the app, show that they had a driver’s license and a suitable car, and they qualified to drive for Uber. As the business caught on, it put pressure on traditional taxi cab companies and soon many of them were put out of business because there was no more demand for their services. Uber drivers were much faster to respond and the fares were cheaper. Riders loved it because they felt like they had their own personal chauffer. No matter where they were or what time of day it was, they could rely on an Uber driver to show up within minutes and take them where they needed to go.
As people who worked for taxi cab companies now found, they had to sign up to work for Uber if they wanted to continue in the same line of work. The only problem was that they would no longer be employed under Uber’s terms. Uber was not “hiring” them but rather contracting out services to them. Thus, Uber was not responsible to them for health care benefits, dental insurance, sick pay, vacation time, retirement plan, pension, or any of the perks that come along with other places of business that actually hire employees as employees. In...
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