“I was struggling to pay my rent,” he said.
That changed when Congress passed the first COVID-19 relief package.
“It did help me” once he could get unemployment benefits, Chowdhury said. “I’m going to appreciate that opportunity as a gig worker.”
This latest spike in pandemic unemployment claims is likely linked to the brief lapse in the program before the last aid package was approved, new shutdowns, and the after-holiday slowdown, according to Dmitri Koustas an economist at the University of Chicago.
Since about a third of the labor force does some work in the gig economy, Koustas said.
“If more people are relying on gig work, a lot of the risk is on the workers themselves.”
That’s because “we’ve attached a whole bunch of rights and privileges and opportunities to employment,” according to Erin Hatton, a sociologist at the University at Buffalo.
Privileges like retirement plans, parental leave, health insurance, and unemployment insurance are tied to traditional full-time jobs.
And Heidi Shierholz, a labor economist at the Economic Policy Institute, said that was problematic before, but with the pandemic, “it’s really shown us that there are gaps in our regular unemployment system that you can drive a truck through. We do have the ability to close them, like the existence of this program shows us that we can do it.”
Josh Godfrey in Houston knows this well. He works for DoorDash, and his earnings dropped from $600 to $150 a week during the pandemic.
Without the temporary gig unemployment benefits, Godfrey doesn’t know what he would have done. And now he’s making plans.
“The pandemic kind of pushed me to kind of reevaluate what I’m doing in life and take steps towards getting a more stable job that I won’t lose due to market volatility.”
So he’s going back to school.