The Independent Contractor Workforce: New Evidence On Its Size and Composition and Ways to Improve Its Measurement in Household Surveys / Katharine G. Abraham, Brad Hershbein, Susan N. Houseman, Beth Truesdale.
Material type:
- Survey Methods • Sampling Methods
- Survey Methods • Sampling Methods
- Labor Contracts
- Labor Contracts
- Informal Labor Markets
- Informal Labor Markets
- Contracting Out • Joint Ventures • Technology Licensing
- Contracting Out • Joint Ventures • Technology Licensing
- Labor Contracting Devices
- Labor Contracting Devices
- C83
- J41
- J46
- L24
- M55
- Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Working Paper | Biblioteca Digital | Colección NBER | nber w30997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
March 2023.
Good data on the size and composition of the independent contractor workforce are elusive, with household survey and administrative tax data often disagreeing on levels and trends. We carried out a series of focus groups to learn how self-employed independent contractors speak about their work. Based on these findings, we designed and fielded a large-scale telephone survey to elicit more accurate and complete information on independent contractors, including those who may be coded incorrectly as employees in conventional household survey data and those who are independent contractors in a secondary work activity. We find that, upon probing, roughly one in 10 workers who initially reports working for an employer on one or more jobs (and thus is coded as an employee) is in fact an independent contractor on at least one of those jobs. Incorporating these miscoded workers into estimates of work arrangement on the main job nearly doubles the share who are independent contractors, to about 15 percent of all workers. Young workers, less-educated workers, workers of color, multiple-job holders, and those with low hours are more likely to be miscoded. Taking these workers into account substantively changes the demographic profile of the independent contractor workforce. Our research indicates that probing in household surveys to clarify a worker's employment arrangement and identify all low-hours work is critical for accurately measuring independent contractor work.
Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
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