UN labour organization sets first binding employment standards for gig workers


FILE PHOTO: Delivery drivers for Uber Eats rest while they wait for food orders in Mexico City, Mexico October 16, 2024. REUTERS/Gustavo Graf/File Photo

GENEVA, June 12 (Reuters) - The ⁠International Labour Organization on Friday ‌agreed to adopt the first binding employment standards for platforms offering services such as ​ride-hailing, food delivery ⁠and e-commerce.

A total ⁠of 406 members voted in favour ⁠and eight ‌against, while 36 abstained. Members of the ⁠U.N. agency, which promotes international labour ​rights, include ‌governments, employers and workers.

The agreed ⁠ILO convention ​broadly seeks to extend core labour rights and protections to ⁠gig workers, including pay, safety ​and social protections.

However, some of these protections are linked to employment ⁠status, distinguishing between those classified as self-employed and those recognised as employees.

The convention also states that platforms ​must disclose how ⁠automated systems affect workers and allow ​human involvement in ‌key decisions like account ​deactivation.

(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, Editing by Friederike Heine)

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