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by tolien
3192 days ago
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In the case of Deliveroo, if it can't exist without significant state subsidy then the business model needs revision. This is the same logic that applies to any business that fails to make enough money to continue operating; a startup which asked developers to work for free (or even below-market wages, gambling with equity aside) in order to reduce its costs would be laughed out of the door, it's hard to see why this is any different. Alleging that people "voluntarily chose" to work in gig economy jobs ignores both the significant anti-welfare rhetoric from politicians and (perhaps particularly in the West) cultural push towards employment ("protestant work ethic"), and your own/the GP's points that a number of the people working there are doing so through a shortage of alternatives. On the other hand, we need to be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater; a push (in the UK, the Labour party have been particularly vocal) to ban zero-hours contracts has risks to the ability of people who need the flexibility (students being the obvious example) to find work which suits. > I think it's better to be employed and increasing your value/skill set in the job market than living off welfare They're not mutually exclusive; in this case both happen (although it's debatable to what extent Deliveroo et al develop anyone's skill set).
Equally, the money spent topping up the wages of the low paid could be redirected to providing education. |
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> a number of the people working there are doing so through a shortage of alternatives
Right? Maybe I'm missing what you're saying. But possibly people are willing to pay for goods only at a certain price and if the price was bumped up, those services simply wouldn't be bought. And those jobs wouldn't exist. It doesn't necessarily mean better paying jobs will fill in the gap.
> the money spent topping up the wages of the low paid could be redirected to providing education.
Who's money? The consumers money? Or the VC's money? Are you saying through taxation because I thoroughly disagree.
It's also not as straightforward as you are implying - just having an education does not mean there will be jobs there to greet you after you are done. To make that happen you need to make the environment friendly to job creators - those willing to take the risk and start their own company.