The Gig Economy Gravy Train Is Over

Joan Westenberg
4 min readOct 19, 2023

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Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

From ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft to food delivery platforms like DoorDash and Grubhub, gig platforms have promised affordability and convenience to consumers. But under the glossy surface, there’s a growing and uncomfortable reality: the gig economy isn’t the low-cost luxury it once appeared to be.

At its inception, the gig economy was touted as a cheap way to access on-demand convenience, providing affordable and accessible services to consumers. With competitive pricing, gig platforms enticed customers by offering the comfort of on-demand services at a fraction of the cost of traditional industries. Apps made hailing a ride, ordering takeout, or hiring a handyman as easy as a few taps on a smartphone.

So, what changed?

The answer is in the flawed financial dynamics behind gig platforms. These companies heavily rely on venture capital to fuel their growth and expansion, offset their high costs, and subsidize their burn rate. This allows them to offer artificially low prices to consumers. When VC funds tighten the purse strings, with global interest rates increasing and money getting harder to come by, the companies resort to raising prices to compensate for the funding gap. These price hikes hit every gig economy sector, from higher ride fares to increased delivery fees. And suddenly, having an app that gets your laundry done for you every week starts to seem as ridiculous as it actually is.

But, the economic model and cost structure underlying gig work have always been inherently flawed, even during its initial rise to popularity. None of the numbers ever worked without more and more funding to make up the deficit. And there was never a path to profitability that didn’t involve an eventual gouging at the customer level.

Gig platforms have prioritized rapid growth and market dominance over sustainable profitability. The cost structure was skewed, with companies allocating finances towards marketing, customer acquisition, lobbying, and expansion rather than ensuring fair compensation for gig workers or building the foundation for a longer-term market.

The goal was to expand as quickly as possible, achieve ubiquity, and establish consumer habits around using gig platforms. Financial sustainability was treated as an afterthought, with profitability projected far into the future after market domination had been achieved. This excessive focus on growth over balanced economics meant companies burned through cash at astonishing rates.

The music had to stop at some point. And when accessible venture capital dried up, so did the subsidies that allowed artificially low pricing. Initially drawn to gig services’ affordability, consumers now face a dilemma. Balancing convenience and cost becomes a challenge when prices steadily rise. As consumer budgets are stretched, loyalty to gig platforms wanes.

And it’s not consumers alone who are footing the heavily delayed bill. Gig workers, the backbone of the gig economy, have long been grappling with the discrepancy between the perceived profitability of gig work and their actual earnings. With the rise in prices, workers’ compensation faces further challenges. Higher costs lead to decreased demand and fewer opportunities for workers to earn their desired income.

Gig workers have continuously operated in a precarious and unprotected position, lacking benefits like healthcare and paid time off. But attractive hourly rates partially offset these drawbacks during the early days of the gig economy. With rising gas prices and inflated consumer fees, earnings are dwindling. Gig workers take on all the risks with minimal rewards.

Regulators are starting to take notice. Ongoing lawsuits target the misclassification of workers as independent contractors rather than employees. This deprives them of basic worker protections and lets companies offload costs like payroll taxes onto workers. New legislation looks to increase rights and benefits for gig workers, adding further financial obligations for platforms.

Of course, gig platforms won’t go quietly. They rely heavily on lobbying, campaign donations, and aggressive legal challenges to fend off regulation. But the tide of public opinion is turning against the laissez-faire approach taken towards gig companies so far.

Consumers, workers, and regulators all have reason to question the sustainability of a business model reliant on labour exploitation, market domination, deferred costs, and speculative future profitability. The gig economy’s house of cards is wobbling.

It’s unlikely we’ll see the wholesale collapse of major gig platforms anytime soon. These companies have raised billions in capital, giving them reserves to withstand market turbulence. And billions more will continue pouring in from investors banking on future payouts. But the easy money and boundless public goodwill fueling their meteoric rise is running dry.

Gig platforms face real challenges to achieve sustainable profitability without further gouging workers and consumers. Reigning in bloated budgets focused on expansion over economics would be a start. Creating real paths to benefits and stability for gig workers is also crucial for longer-term viability.

Most importantly, the fundamental business model needs rethinking. The days of endless VC funding and artificially cheap services are over. Either companies build truly sustainable models, or reality will come crashing down.

The gig economy’s easy conveniences no longer hold the same appeal for budget-conscious consumers. As prices inflate, comfort becomes a luxury. Consumers are becoming more resilient and adaptable. They are willing to explore alternative options that provide similar conveniences at lower costs, like cooking their own meals or using public transportation. The glossy veneer of gig platforms is fading, revealing the uncomfortable realities beneath. What once seemed cheap and easy now looks unsustainable and exploitative.

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