Labor Welfare in On-Demand Service Platforms

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Benjaafar, Saif; Ding, Jian-Ya; Kong, Guangwen; Taylor, Terry
署名单位:
University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Tsinghua University; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); Temple University; University of California System; University of California Berkeley
刊物名称:
M&SOM-MANUFACTURING & SERVICE OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
ISSN/ISSBN:
1523-4614
DOI:
10.1287/msom.2020.0964
发表日期:
2022
页码:
110-124
关键词:
Service Operations game theory
摘要:
Problem definition: An on-demand service platform relies on independent workers (agents) who decide how much time, if any, to devote to the platform. Some labor advocates have argued that an expansion of the labor pool hurts agents-by reducing the wage and agent utilization (i.e., the fraction of time an agent is busy serving customers). Motivated by concern for agent welfare, regulators are considering measures that reduce the labor pool size or that impose a floor on the nominal wage or effective wage (i.e., the product of the nominal wage and agent utilization). Are agents indeed hurt by an expansion in the labor pool size? Which type of wage-floor regulation is preferable? Are consumers hurt by the imposition of a wage floor? Academic/practical relevance: Because independent agents work without the traditional protections intended to ensure the welfare of employees, the welfare of those agents is an important concern. Methodology: We employ an equilibrium model that accounts for the interaction among price, wage, labor supply, customer delay, and demand. Results: Average labor welfare increases and then decreases in the labor pool size; that is, agents are harmed by an expansion in the labor pool size if and only if the labor pool size is sufficiently large. The effective wage floor is superior to the nominal wage floor in terms of labor welfare maximization. More generally, the two types of wage floors have structurally different effects on labor welfare, with a floor on the nominal wage only beneficial to agents if it is sufficiently small. Contrary to the conventional view that consumers are hurt by an effective wage floor (because they face a higher price, due to upward pressure on the wage, and longer delay, due to upward pressure on agent utilization), consumers actually benefit. Managerial implications: Regulators, labor advocates, platform managers, and agents benefit from understanding the forces that create and destroy labor welfare.
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