The gig economy pays just $828 a month — here's why driving for Uber is no substitute for a full-time job (EBAY, AMZN)
Uber Lyft Taxi Car
Uber Lyft Taxi Car

Ints Kalnins/Reuters

  • The number of people participating in the so-called gig economy has increased significantly in the last five years, a new study from JP Morgan Chase Institute found.

  • The increase was largely spurred by growing numbers of people driving for services such as Uber and Lyft, according to the study.

  • But few people are making significant money from the gig economy, the study found.

  • Most people only participate intermittently, and average monthly earnings have plunged.

 

The companies leading the gig economy, and their boosters, have touted its potential to replace or substitute for regular, full-time jobs.

But whether the gig is driving for Uber or delivering burritos for Postmates or walking dogs for Wag, such work isn't actually replacing regular employment for those who do it, according to a new study from the JP Morgan Chase Institute. What's worse: Earnings from such activities has plunged over the last five years, even as more people started participating in them, the study found.

"Some people got a little ahead of the curve in saying this was the future of work," said Diana Farrell, the institute's CEO. "It's not at all clear that people are leaving their traditional jobs to do this instead."

For the study, the institute tracked some 39 million anonymized Chase bank accounts from the 23 states in which the company has a branch monthly from October 2012 to March 2018. The accounts included in the sample were ones in which the primary account holder was 18 or older, and in which there were at least five debits each month, which the organization took as an indication that the account was a significant one in holders' financial lives.

The study looked at whether those accounts saw income in any month during the period covered from one of 128 different online services that facilitate gig economy transactions, by matching individuals offering goods and services with those shopping for them. The institute grouped those services into four different categories — transportation of goods and people; non-transportation freelance work, such as home repair; selling of goods and goods, such as on eBay or Etsy; and leasing of real or other property, such as through Airbnb.

The institute found that the portion of accounts that saw income from such services increased markedly over the period of its study. In March of this year, 1.6% of accounts had income from at least one of the gig economy services, up from just 0.3% in the first quarter of 2013.

Likewise, as of March, some 4.5% of accounts had seen income from one of the services in the previous year, compared with less than 2% in the year leading up to September 2013.