The Role of Independent Contractors in the U.S. Economy

J. Eisenach
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

More than 10 million workers, comprising 7.4 percent of the U.S. workforce, are classified by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as independent contractors, and another 4 million work in alternative work arrangements in which they may be legally classified as independent contractors for one or more purposes. Alternative workers in 2010 will account for approximately $626 billion in personal income, or about one in every eight dollars earned in the U.S. Independent contractor arrangements are commonplace throughout the U.S. economy, from computer software engineers and emergency room physicians to home health care providers and timber harvesters. Such arrangements generate substantial economic and other benefits for both workers and employers, allowing both firms and households to use labor services in situations where a traditional employment relationship is either impractical or uneconomic for the worker, the client, or both. The economic benefits of independent contracting include workforce flexibility, avoidance of fixed costs, the ability to “pay for performance,” the avoidance of legal and economic barriers in efficient contracting, and, perhaps most important, the satisfaction of workers’ desires to “be their own boss” and benefit from the independence associated with independent contractor relationships. Another important reason workers prefer independent contracting is that it serves as a stepping stone to entrepreneurship and small-business formation. Policy changes that curtail independent contracting, such as the proposed repeal of the Section 530 “safe harbor” for classification of workers for tax purposes (which would increase regulatory risk for independent contractors and their clients alike), would result in higher unemployment, slower economic growth and reduced economic welfare. Specifically, curtailing independent contracting would: reduce job creation and small business formation; reduce competition and increase prices; create sector specific disruptions; and produce a less flexible and dynamic work force.
独立承包商在美国经济中的作用
美国劳工统计局(Bureau of Labor Statistics)将占美国劳动力7.4%的1000多万工人归类为独立合同工,另有400万人从事替代工作安排,他们可能因一个或多个目的而在法律上被归类为独立合同工。2010年,替代工人将占美国个人收入的6260亿美元左右,约占美国收入的八分之一。在美国经济中,从计算机软件工程师、急诊室医生到家庭医疗保健提供者和木材采伐者,独立承包商的安排是司空见惯的。这种安排为工人和雇主都带来了巨大的经济和其他利益,允许公司和家庭在传统雇佣关系对工人、客户或两者都不切实际或不经济的情况下使用劳务。独立合同的经济效益包括劳动力的灵活性,避免固定成本,“按绩效支付”的能力,在有效的合同中避免法律和经济障碍,也许最重要的是,满足了工人“做自己的老板”的愿望,并从与独立合同关系相关的独立性中获益。工人们更喜欢独立签约的另一个重要原因是,它可以作为创业和小企业形成的垫脚石。限制独立合同的政策变化,例如拟议废除为税收目的对工人进行分类的第530条“安全港”(这将增加独立承包商及其客户的监管风险),将导致失业率上升,经济增长放缓和经济福利减少。具体来说,削减独立合同将:减少创造就业机会和小企业的形成;减少竞争,提高价格;创造特定行业的颠覆;导致劳动力缺乏灵活性和活力。
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