The gig economy during an epidemic: coupling disease transmission with labour market dynamics
Abstract
The gig economy has grown significantly in recent years, driven by the emergence of various facilitating platforms. Triggering substantial shifts to labour markets across the world, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated this growth. To understand the crucial role of such an epidemic on the dynamics of labour markets of both formal and gig economies, we develop and investigate a model that couples disease transmission and a search and match framework of unemployment. We find that epidemics increase gig economy employment at the expense of formal economy employment, and can increase the total long term unemployment. In the short run, large sharp fluctuations in labour market tightness and unemployment can occur, while in the long run, employment is reduced under an endemic disease equilibrium. We analyze a public policies that increase unemployment benefits or provide benefits to gig workers to mitigate these effects, and evaluate their trade-offs in mitigating disease burden and labour market disruptions.
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