There Are Probably More Gig Workers Than Counted in U.S. Survey

  • Survey excludes full-time workers who have a side job
  • Government report showed gig economy shrank from 2005 to 2017
Photographer: Yana Paskova/Bloomberg
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The share of American workers in the “gig economy” has shrunk since 2005, according to a government report that some data-watchers cautioned omits key parts of the picture.

The Labor Department on Thursday said that 10.1 percent of American employees in May 2017 were on alternative work arrangements -- which includes independent contractors, on-call workers and people working for third-party contractors -- down from the 10.7 percent in the last report in 2005. That decline resulted mainly from a drop in the share of people identifying as independent contractors, which fell to 6.9 percent from 7.4 percent in 2005.