The American self-employment landscape is undergoing a significant shift, with the motivations, permutations, incentives and opportunities for going it alone boosted by changes in technology, business priorities and the broader availability of services traditionally cast as employee benefits.
In 2016, there were about 9.6 million self-employed workers in the US, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which expects the number to increase to 10.3 million by 2026 for an 8% hop. So what’s behind this rise in the number of workers willing to forego traditional employment for an apparently more hardscrabble existence?
Flexibility on Both Sides
For one thing, more workers want more direct input in shaping their careers. Some want to work as contractors or part-timers for several employers at once to sample a variety of workplace opportunities and experiences, or simply to maximize their earnings potential. In fact, these aspects of self employment appeal to workers at all stages of career development.
For others still, self employment through contracted work meshes better than traditional employment with the “work anywhere” trend popular with young parents and caregivers — as well as a growing cadre of workers who wish to work remotely while seeing the world.
Never Too Early, Never Too Late
It’s primarily younger workers who use self employment to explore different career paths at the same time. Mid-careerists, meanwhile, may view side-gigging as a way to help pay their kids through college or, more strategically, to scope out avenues for second careers. And older workers, perhaps past their earnings prime in nine-to-five positions, willingly leverage their expertise as “consultants” to several employers simultaneously as a chance to earn as much as ever, if not more.
Meanwhile US businesses seeking to trim overhead — especially those up against rivals in places with lower operational costs — are eager for workers who don’t draw benefits, and can be added or let go quickly. Increasingly, these businesses look to part-timers, contractors, and outsourcing firms to make them more competitive.
New Tech, New Attitudes
New attitudes are feeding into the rise of the self-employed worker. To be blunt, the demise of the defined-benefit pension and a broad-based move away from health insurance tied to specific employers are making many workers question the wisdom of hitching their financial wagons to a single company. Meanwhile, the view — already in place now for decades and bolstered by the cruel sting of periodic layoffs — that US workers can expect to work for multiple employers further erodes incentives to bother trying to climb corporate ladders against a backdrop of cutthroat office politics, inadequate air circulation, and upholstered cubicles.
Together these trends have converged in a movement attuned to an emergent “gig” or “sharing” economy that is in turn based on willing workers seeking to match their services with employers in economically efficient ways. And it seems likely that evolving technologies, and more flexible health-insurance options will contribute to attitudes that accelerate the move toward self employment — perhaps at a pace the Bureau of Labor Statistics couldn’t fully appreciate in 2016.
Also of note is the rise of web-based providers that rely on independent owner-operators to deliver services such as Uber and Airbnb, as well as online hubs like Fiverr and Guru and that connect workers and employers for specific projects.
An Original Crowd
But can every self-employed worker or independent professional claim kinship with a hardcore entrepreneur? Some would say no, holding that entrepreneurs earn that title by wresting money from a grudging economy through innovation and consciously or not, thought leadership.