Why in the news?
Telangana Legislative Assembly has passed the Telangana Platform-Based Gig Workers (Registration, Social Security and Welfare) Act, 2026, becoming the fifth state to adopt such legislation, after Rajasthan, Karnataka, Jharkhand and Bihar.
Key Highlights of the Act
- Aim: Provide Social security, employment and service conditions, safety, health and welfare measures for platform-based gig workers.
- Tripartite Social Security and Welfare Board: Established to register gig workers, with representation of women and persons with disabilities.
- Social Security and Welfare Fund: To be financed through a 1-2% levy on platform transaction values, borne by aggregators, complemented by State grants and CSR funds.
- The corpus will support insurance, accident cover, pension and maternity benefits.
- Universal Registration: Every worker will receive a unique identification number enabling direct access to government schemes.
- Grievance redressal system: Platform-level committees and district-level complaint mechanisms to protect workers from sudden termination or payment stoppages.
- Every aggregator platform with at least 100 workers must constitute an internal dispute resolution committee.
- Transparency: Companies required to maintain full transparency in order allocation and payment calculations; Arbitrary rate cuts will attract penalties.
About Gig Economy
- The Code on Social Security, 2020, defines a gig worker as a person who works outside a traditional employer-employee relationship.
- Types:
- Platform workers: Those whose work is based on online apps or digital platforms. E.g., Ola, Uber, Zomato, Swiggy, Urban Company, etc.
- Non-platform gig workers: Generally casual wage workers and own account workers in the conventional sectors, working part-time or full time.
- Status of Gig Economy in India:
- Increase in Gig Workers: From 77 lakh in FY21 to 120 lakh in FY25.
- Projected to increase 235 lakh by 2029–30
- Share of Total Workforce (FY25): >2%
- India's Global Rank in Gig Workers: 5th largest (Projected 3rd by 2030)
- Gig Economy Value: ~USD 20 billion with projected Growth of 17% annual growth till 2027
- Increase in Gig Workers: From 77 lakh in FY21 to 120 lakh in FY25.
Significance of Gig Economy
- Economic:
- Employment and Economic Growth: The platform economy has the potential to create up to 90 million jobs and add up to 1.25% to India's GDP in the long run. (BCG report)
- It provides a transition pathway for those leaving agriculture or declining industries, supplementary income for those in unstable employment, and primary employment option for those unable to secure formal-sector positions.
- Supports Quick Commerce Ecosystem: Platforms like Blinkit and Zepto are now a major consumption driver in urban India, depend largely on gig delivery networks.
- Economic Choice: Gig economy provides freedom for workers to choose when and how much they work.
- Employment and Economic Growth: The platform economy has the potential to create up to 90 million jobs and add up to 1.25% to India's GDP in the long run. (BCG report)
- Social:
- Financial Inclusion: Provides income to migrants, youth, and semi-skilled workers, facilitating access to digital payments and credit.
- Women Empowerment: The gig economy has potential for increasing women's economic participation due to-
- Flexible hours allow women to balance household responsibilities with paid work
- Home-based and digital gig work bypasses mobility constraints and safety concerns of traditional workplaces.
- Women constitute ~28% of platform economy workers as participation is rising across urban and semi-urban areas.
- Empowerment of PwDs: Gig economy provides employment opportunities for PwDs due to flexible, location-independent jobs.
- Micro-Entrepreneurship: Platforms like Airbnb and Urban Company let people monetize their skills, assets, and time while lowering entry barriers such as access to capital.
- Technology & Innovation: Drives digital adoption among low-income workers, bringing millions into the formal digital payments ecosystem.
- Convenience for Consumers: Gig economy enables personalised and cheaper services with doorstep access and increases consumer choice.
Challenges
- Income Volatility: Declining per-order payouts and lack of minimum wage guarantee cause unstable earnings.
- Occupational Hazards: Efficiency-boosting measures such as aggressive delivery timelines increase accident risk and mental stress among delivery workers.
- E.g. Delivery workers of the platforms like Swiggy, Zomato, Blinkit, and Zepto went on strikes on New Year's Eve, calling for a ban on 10-minute deliveries.
- Lack of Social Security: No assured health insurance, accident cover, or pension under existing laws due to classification as 'independent contractors' and not employees.
- Poor Work Conditions: 60% of platform workers work 7 days a week, while 47% of the workers work for more than 12 hours a day (Tata Institute of Social Science).
- They lack access to basic amenities like clean toilets, drinking water etc.
- Algorithmic Management: Opaque algorithms control order allocation, ratings, and sudden account suspension, compromising workers' collective bargaining power.
- Coverage Gaps: The Code on Social Security, 2020's '90-day rule' is criticised as too restrictive for short-term gig workers.
- The workers are eligible for benefits only after 90 days on one platform or 120 days across multiple under the Code.
- Gender & Safety Barriers: Women face additional constraints such as safety concerns on late-night delivery routes, social stigma, and limited access to high-paying gig categories.
- Implementation Deficit: India's first Act for Gig workers by Rajasthan (2023) has seen slow rollout.
Initiatives for Gig workers
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Conclusion
Gig and Platform economy is the present and future of work. Effective tripartite dialogue and cooperation between governments, employers/aggregators and workers is essential to strengthen the legal and institutional basis for sustainable growth. NITI Aayog Report recommended a 'Platform India Initiative' on the lines of Startup India to accelerate platformisation and formalize worker protections. Having a balanced humane approach towards growth of the gig economy is essential to uphold social and economic welfare.