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Well-Being and Mental Health in the Gig Economy

A Policy Brief by The Policy Observatory, published by University of Westminster Press

By Sally-Anne Gross, George Musgrave, Laima Janciute

A response is needed to the numerous issues spurred by the expansion of the gig economy, where flexible patterns of employment prevail in contrast to permanent jobs. In this context of the exponential growth of the digital economy and underlying business models the largest nationwide study of its kind into the impact of the working conditions in the UK music industry ‘Can Music Make You Sick?’ has been conducted by MusicTank/University of Westminster.

This research suggests the need to consider the future of work not only from an economic or employment law perspective but from a mental health one too. What are the psychological implications of precarious work and how are factors such as financial instability, the feedback economy and personal relationships reflected in mental health outcomes or connected to the business relationships most musicians and other gig economy participants work under?

Authors Sally-Anne Gross, George Musgrave and Laima Janciute consider which policy measures may help or harm gig economy workers including the taxation of self-employed workers, a universal basic income, education around mental health issues and access to mental health support.

 

Gross, S et al. 2018. Well-Being and Mental Health in the Gig Economy: Policy Perspectives on Precarity. London: University of Westminster Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.16997/book32

License

This book distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution + Noncommercial + NoDerivatives 4.0 license. Copyright is retained by the author(s)

The Policy Observatory

About The Policy Observatory

The CAMRI Policy Observatory aims to amplify the impact of our research on policy debates and developments nationally, internationally and globally. The Observatory engages in outreach, networking and publication activities, seeking to establish links with a variety of policymakers and stakeholders, including civil society, media organisations, politicians and government officials.

Details

Author
The Policy Observatory
Date
16 August 2018
Research Area
Published By
University of Westminster Press
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