Social protection of atypical workers during the Covid-19 crisis - IAB-Forum

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Social protection of atypical workers during the Covid-19 crisis - IAB-Forum
Datum: 28. May 2021

Social protection of atypical workers
during the Covid-19 crisis
Kerstin Bruckmeier, Diego d´Andria , Regina Konle-Seidl

The Covid-19 crisis acts like a magnifying glass under which already existing problems within
countries’ social protection systems become more visible than before. It puts the spotlight on
weaknesses, especially the social protection of the atypically employed and the (solo) self-
employed.

Across many countries, a number of social benefits have been expanded to better protect
these groups during the crisis. This article firstly describes the development of atypical
employment before the crisis and then provides an overview of measures introduced in five
selected EU countries to counteract the negative income effects of the crisis. The countries
include Germany, France, Finland, Italy, and the United Kingdom. In a follow-up article to be
published in July 2021, we will further discuss whether the coronavirus crisis has exposed the
need for social protection systems to be adapted in the longer term.

                                                                                      Quelle:
https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Social protection of atypical workers during the Covid-19 crisis - IAB-Forum
Datum: 28. May 2021

Non-standard forms of employment develop differently
across Europe
In the Covid-19 crisis, non-standard or atypical forms of employment are disproportionately
affected as shown by Carina Sperber et al. in a 2021 study. In all European countries, the
different forms of paid work beyond standard permanent full-time employment have become
more prevalent in recent decades. However, since the last economic crisis of 2008/09, the
average share of traditional non-standard workers at the EU level has hardly increased
except for part-time and very short-term employment. Traditional non-standard employment
such as temporary work has even declined, particularly in Germany (see Figure 1).

In Germany, part-time employment is especially common. The share of regular part-time
workers continues to rise while the number of marginal part-time workers who earn up to 450
euros (so-called “pure mini-jobbers”) has been decreasing since 2015. The share of
employees working under a temporary contract (including fixed-term contracts,
apprenticeships and temporary agency work) has also been decreasing since 2015 (see
temporary contracts in Figure 1). This trend is confirmed by a study based on German
establishment panel data. The share of fix-term contracts fell significantly between 2018 and
2020 as a 2021 study by Christian Hohendanner shows. Short-term employment contracts
with a duration of less than three months are hardly relevant in Germany. In contrast, with 5
and 4 percent of all employed persons respectively, such contracts are much more common
in France and Finland. In the United Kingdom and especially in Italy, solo self-employment
(self-employed without employees) is a very common form of non-standard employment.

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Social protection of atypical workers during the Covid-19 crisis - IAB-Forum
Datum: 28. May 2021

New forms of employment become increasingly
important
In addition to the aforementioned forms of atypical employment, there are new work
arrangements such as on-call work or casual work, mobile work using information and
communication technologies (ICT) or freelance work under work contracts or service
contracts. These new forms of work, mainly ICT-based mobile work, have grown exponentially
during the Covid-19 pandemic and associated lock-down measures, although they are not a
new phenomenon.

Analyses of such new forms of employment across the European Union, such as a 2020

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Social protection of atypical workers during the Covid-19 crisis - IAB-Forum
Datum: 28. May 2021

Eurofound study, emphasise that standard employment is not simply replaced by non-
standard work, but that employment is becoming increasingly diverse compared to
traditional forms of atypical employment, it is more difficult to collect statistics on these new
forms of employment. New forms of work are regulated differently across countries and they
are also subject to different social protection provisions. They can be subject to general
labour laws or specific rules, regulated by collective agreements, or not regulated at all. In
Germany, on-call work, for example, is covered by labour law and, with the exception of
“mini-jobs on call”, casual workers are subject to regular social protection contributions
whereas “zero-hour contracts” in the United Kingdom can be considered as a precarious form
of employment, as they, for example, do not guarantee a minimum number of working hours.

The rising importance of platform work across Europe
New challenges for labour markets worldwide are posed by the upcoming platform economy.
The rise in activities within the platform economy is particularly striking, although platform-
related jobs are still in the minority. Recent data published by the International Labour
Organization in 2021 show that between 2015 and 2020 the number of active digital labour
platforms worldwide increased, ranging between plus 28 percent for pure web-based online
services to about plus 77 percent for delivery services and plus 100 percent for taxi
platforms. The COLLEEM survey conducted in 2018 across 16 EU countries and discussed in a
2020 paper by Urzì Brancati et al. attempts to estimate the number of workers performing
platform work. However, since platform work is a relatively new form of employment and
difficult to capture statistically, the survey may suffer from some bias and the results should
be considered as approximations. The study estimates that about 11 percent of workers have
provided services via digital platforms, either as their primary or as a secondary/marginal job.
Figure 2 shows that more than 12 percent of the projected number of German workers have
provided such services in 2018, 1.5 percent as their main job and 4.2 percent as a secondary
job.

The other categories (“marginal” and “sporadic”) are defined as either having provided
services via platforms at least monthly, spending less than 10 hours a week and generating
less than 25 percent of their income via platforms (this is the “marginal” group), or having
provided services less than once per month (this is the “sporadic” group).

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

Platform workers are a very heterogeneous group, and they rank between dependent
employment and self-employment. The COLLEEM survey points out that these workers are
mainly males or young couples; about half of them have a high level of education, which is
significantly larger than in the general population; and a disproportionally high number of
them have a foreign background. Average hourly pay varies widely, reflecting the fact that
some platform jobs are highly specialised (e.g. professionals, software coders) while others
are essentially low-skill jobs (e.g. delivery services).

Platform workers face a high risk of precariousness, particularly those engaged in low-skilled
and online platform work. The main challenge for the better regulation of platform work is the
unclear employment status of platform workers: Are they employees with the corresponding
labour and social rights, or are they predominantly (bogus) self-employed workers? In several
EU countries (e.g. in Germany) there are judicial case-by-case classifications of platform
workers, but there is usually no general application of rules to all platform workers. Only very

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

recently and for the first time in the EU, platform workers in Spain have been generally
recognised by law as workers with employees’ rights. In a single case ruling from February
2021, the Federal Labour Court in Germany also classified platform workers as “employees”.
Proposals to improve labour conditions for platform workers are high on the political agenda
in the European Union (for a further discussion see the IAB-Forum article “Will the German
social protection system need to be adapted after the Covid-19 crisis?” to be published in
June 2021).

Unemployment insurance systems provide insufficient
coverage for non-standard workers
Germany, France, Italy, Finland, and the United Kingdom have multi-layered social protection
systems. Unemployment insurance benefits are usually the first pillar of the support system
for the unemployed. Unemployment insurance benefits are typically financed by
contributions from employers and employees or sometimes by state subsidies as in Finland.
Unemployment insurance generally does not distinguish between different forms of
employment among the insured group of workers. In principle, it is also open to fixed-term or
part-time employees, provided that they pay contributions. However, in most countries,
certain qualifying periods (minimum periods of employment) are a prerequisite for receiving
insurance benefits. These vary considerably from country to country. In Germany, employees
normally must have been employed for at least 12 months during the last 30 months to be
eligible, whereas in France this is normally 6 months within the last 24 months. The duration
of benefit receipt varies considerably: in the United Kingdom, flat-rate unemployment
insurance benefits are only granted for 6 months; in Germany, insurance benefits are paid for
a period of time between 12 and 24 months, and in France between 24 and 36 months.
Individuals who have been employed only for a short period or who have a temporary
contract run the risk of not being able to meet the eligibility criteria. In Germany, about one
third of the unemployed whose employment ended in 2016 or 2017 were not eligible for
unemployment insurance benefits and did not take up a new job within the subsequent
month, as shown by the Gesine Stephan’s 2019 study. Even if these persons are entitled to
unemployment insurance benefits, their level is not always sufficient to secure their
livelihood, for example if they previously received low wages or worked part-time.

This does not mean, however, that this group of people does not have any social protection
at all. Depending on their income in the household context, in Germany they are entitled to
supplementary basic income benefits in the form of ALG II (unemployment benefit II). The
calculations of the IAB show that, due to shorter qualifying periods in the past, more newly
unemployed people would be entitled to unemployment insurance benefits than is presently

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

the case. However, only a proportion of these unemployed persons would be able to cover
their living costs with it. The other proportion would still have to claim supplementary
benefits like ALG II as the insurance-based unemployment benefit would not be sufficient.

Self-employed and platform workers have little access
to social protection
Unemployed persons who do not pay contributions (whether voluntarily or involuntarily) are
not covered by unemployment insurance. In Germany, these are individuals who are so-
called “mini-jobbers”. In Finland, voluntary membership in an unemployment fund is a
prerequisite for receiving wage-related unemployment benefits. In 2015, about 90 percent of
all employees were members of an unemployment fund. The self-employed and platform
workers are groups who are usually not eligible for unemployment insurance coverage. These
groups include self-employed small-scale entrepreneurs and often also the solo self-
employed as well as so-called “gig” or “platform workers”. Frequently, they have low
incomes and are not sufficiently protected in the event of a sharp drop in income and lack of
support from other household members. In most EU-countries self-employed people are
traditionally not compulsorily insured against unemployment. However, voluntary
membership in unemployment insurance schemes is possible in most countries. In Germany,
voluntary insurance for those who set up a new business is possible. However, in 2018, partly
due to restrictive access conditions, only a small share of those who started a new business
took advantage of voluntary insurance as shown in the 2020 study by Elke Jahn and Michael
Oberfichtner. In the United Kingdom, there are no possibilities for self-employed workers to
gain access to the unemployment insurance. In Italy, so-called ”false self-employed” and self-
employed not already covered by a specialised professional pension fund (e.g. those existing
for lawyers, medical doctors, and other categories) are covered by a specific fund (so-called
“Gestione Separata”). Unlike the German social insurance for artists – a special scheme that
offers artists and writers insurance at a subsidised rate involving mandatory membership for
artists – a similar scheme in France (so-called “Intermittents du spectacle”) also includes
specific regulations in the event of unemployment.

Minimum income systems vary in their protective
capacity
Unemployed persons who are not (sufficiently) covered by unemployment insurance benefits
or whose entitlement has expired can apply for subordinated means-tested benefits in all
countries considered here. While Finland, France, and Italy operate second-tier

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

unemployment assistance schemes which are granting means-tested but wage-related
benefits exclusively to the unemployed, Germany and the United Kingdom run universal
basic income schemes which grant benefits, irrespective of the unemployment status, to all
those who fall below a certain income threshold. The basic income scheme for job-seekers in
Germany and the “Universal Credit” in the United Kingdom are two very comprehensive
means-tested basic income systems, which also cover self-employed people with low income
and low-wage earners on the household level. This broad accessibility has underpinned the
protective capacity of universal basic income systems during the pandemic. This is most
notable compared to more residual minimum income schemes in countries such as Italy
where a rather selective “Citizenship Income” (the so-called “Reddito di Cittadinanza”) was
introduced at national level only in 2019. In May 2020, the government had to introduce an
“emergency income” (the so-called “Reddito di emergenza”) in addition to the existing
“Citizenship Income” scheme due to considerable gaps in covering low-income families.

Many countries extended short-time work schemes to
atypical workers
In the current crisis, short-time compensation or comparable benefits such as partial
unemployment benefits or temporary layoffs have been the means of choice in almost all
European countries to protect employees from income losses.

At the European level, a similar instrument for temporary “Support to mitigate
Unemployment Risks in an Emergency” (SURE) was created. The financial support is provided
in the form of loans granted on favourable terms from the EU to those Member States who
request to receive financial support under SURE. When approved by the Council, SURE helps
Member States to cover the costs directly related to the financing of national short-time work
schemes, and other similar measures they have put in place as a response to the Covid-19
pandemic, in particular for the self-employed.

When programmes are financed from general tax revenues such as the British Job Retention
Scheme, they have no direct link to the unemployment insurance system, as shown by
Regina Konle-Seidl’s 2020 overview. In Germany, short-time work benefits are generally
financed from the contributions to unemployment insurance, implying that workers affected
by short-time work must in any case be in an employment relationship subject to social
insurance contributions.

In contrast to the financial crisis of 2008/2009, many countries have extended access to
short-time work benefits to more employment groups and economic sectors in order to cover

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

workers who were previously not eligible. In Germany, for example, “temporary help
workers” are now entitled to short-time work allowance. In France, the employment group
“domestic workers” are now covered. In Italy and the United Kingdom, “on-call workers” were
also included in the respective short-time working programmes (see Table).

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Datum: 28. May 2021

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In all countries, there were gaps in the coverage of small businesses and the self-employed
even before the Covid-19 pandemic. During the crisis, all five countries therefore introduced
temporary measures to better support these groups (see Table). In addition, four of the five
countries under comparison have made temporary benefit extensions to the unemployment
insurance system, in order to take the reduced chances of re-employment in the event of job
loss into account (see Table).

In all five countries, temporary measures were put in place to bridge existing gaps in the
lower-tier basic income systems. The aim of these measures is to facilitate access to social
benefits for groups not covered by short-time work schemes or not entitled to unemployment
insurance benefits in case of job loss. This was also the case in countries with a well-
developed basic income system, such as the United Kingdom (the so-called “Universal
Credit”) or Germany (the so-called “Grundsicherung für Arbeitssuchende”). The United
Kingdom relaxed the upper limit for social benefits and increased the standard rate by almost
100 pounds. In Germany, limits on the assets which can be held by claimants in the basic
income scheme has temporarily been eased and the upper limit for housing costs has been
suspended. In addition, the ”emergency child allowance” facilitated access to an additional
child allowance for low-income families.

Conclusion
Many countries have reacted quickly and used a range of instruments to support those who
have lost their livelihoods during the crisis. Almost all EU countries either relied on or
extended existing short-time working schemes, or introduced such schemes. Some also
made their unemployment benefit- and basic social protection systems more generous and
eased access requirements. The ad hoc measures taken, and in particular the extension of
short-time working benefits to some groups of atypically employed workers, have prevented
the segmentation between employees in regular jobs and those in atypical employment from
becoming even more pronounced. For the future, the question will arise as to which of the
extraordinary crisis measures should be retained and even extended to the increasing
number of workers in non-traditional forms of atypical employment such as platform- or solo
self-employed workers. In a follow-up article to be published in June 2021 we discuss whether
social protection gaps revealed by the crisis require more universal social protection systems
to gradually replace wage and standard–employment centred social protection systems.

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https://www.iab-forum.de/en/social-protection-of-atypical-workers-during-the-covid-19-crisis/ |
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Literature
Eurofound (2020): New forms of employment: 2020 update, New forms of employment
series, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg.

Hohendanner, Christian (2021): Befristungen im zweiten Jahr in Folge rückläufig. IAB-Forum
Serie „Corona-Krise: Folgen für den Arbeitsmarkt“, 26 April 2021.

ILO (2021): World Employment and Social Outlook 2021 – The role of digital labour platforms
in transforming the world of work.

Jahn, Elke; Oberfichtner, Michael (2020): Freiwillige Arbeitslosenversicherung: Nur wenige
Selbstständige versichern sich gegen die Folgen von Arbeitslosigkeit. IAB-Kurzbericht, No.
11/2020, Nürnberg.

Konle-Seidl, Regina (2020): Short-time Work in Europe: Rescue in the Current COVID-19
Crisis? IAB-Forschungsbericht, No. 04/2020 (en), Nürnberg, 17 p.

Stephan, Gesine (2019): Anspruchsvoraussetzungen beim Arbeitslosengeld: Längere
Rahmenfrist hat überschaubare Auswirkungen. IAB-Kurzbericht, No. 9/2019, Nürnberg.

Urzì Brancati, Cesira; Pesole, Annarosa; Fernández-Macías, Enrique (2020): New evidence on
platform workers in Europe. Results from the second COLLEEM survey, EUR 29958 EN,
Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, 2020.

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