Gig work empowers Delhi women but brings challenges

In Noida's gig economy, women are securing better pay through app-based household services, earning up to Rs 1,000 for a 12-hour day. Yet, they grapple with stigma from uniforms, inadequate rest facilities, and unreasonable client demands. Platforms like Snabbit provide training and incentives, but workers call for greater support.

India's surging online platforms economy has finally transformed household work, one of its last frontiers. Previously reliant on migrant flows, cash transactions, and local word-of-mouth networks, the sector now features algorithmically managed, GPS-tracked, on-demand services. In Noida's Sector 76, eight women working for Snabbit—an app promising 'home chore assistance within 10 minutes'—gather on sidewalks in bright pink uniforms between gigs. Most hail from West Bengal, Bihar, or Uttar Pradesh, with 12-hour workdays encompassing cleaning, laundry, logging in, waiting, and traveling between housing societies.

Meera, 32, from Nadia's West Bengal, said, 'My income has roughly doubled.' Her previous app offered no weekly off and docked pay for under six hours. Renu, 28, from Bihar's Darbhanga, noted constant pressure and unexplained penalties before. Now, 'a 12-hour day earns us Rs 1,000 even if there is only one order,' Meera added. Incentives include Rs 20 for logging in 15 minutes early, Rs 1,200 weekend rates, and rating-based bonuses, making monthly earnings predictable. Previously, in domestic roles, factories, or reception, they earned no more than Rs 14,000-16,000. Sushma, 26, shared, 'I earned Rs 8,500 at an AC parts unit; now, with overtime, sometimes more than Rs 1,000 a day.'

Referred into the platform, the women appreciate the anonymity: 'It is easier to work for people you don’t know,' said Guddi from Lucknow, avoiding the shouting from familiar employers. Yet, daily new homes and temperaments exhaust them. Uniforms mark them uncomfortably, especially in winter without cover. In Sector 100, first-time workers from UP and Rajasthan hide in parks, fearing residents' threats of police calls to avoid family stigma. 'People judge women for everything,' one said. They lie about doing 'office' work. Waiting spots lack shade, restrooms, or changing areas; one recounted a false theft accusation, stripped for search.

Clients demand more than ordered, like three hours in a one-hour slot, including unreasonable tasks. Abusive assignments recur, requiring pleas to team leaders who patrol on two-wheelers. Platforms like Urban Company began with beauty services, expanding to chores; Snabbit and Pronto launched in 2024. 'Finishing school' trains on politeness, grooming—no big jewelry, daily moisturizer—and professional conduct. Snabbit classifies workers as 'independent contractors' with monthly payments, incentives, and insurance up to Rs 4 lakh. A spokesperson said breaks are scheduled, with micro-market solutions for rests. Pronto offers hubs with seating, water, and hygiene facilities; earnings up to Rs 40,000 monthly. Workers still seek better facilities amid the opportunities.

関連記事

Rural Indian laborers working and protesting the VB-G RAM G Act in fields, with signs on state cost-sharing and Karnataka's challenge, symbolizing rural employment concerns.
AIによって生成された画像

New VB-G RAM G Act shifts rural employment burden to states

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

India's Viksit Bharat-Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025, replaces the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, introducing budget caps and requiring states to share 40% of costs. This change promises 125 days of work but raises concerns over funding shortfalls and uneven implementation. Karnataka is preparing a legal and political challenge, arguing it undermines rural social justice.

Bihar's Mukhyamantri Mahila Rojgar Yojana, popularly known as the dushazaari scheme, has received over 23 lakh applications in just over a month. The total number of applications now stands at 1.8 crore, including 1.44 crore women who received funds before the assembly elections. The initiative is credited as a key factor in the ruling NDA's electoral success.

AIによるレポート

An assembly line of Filipino remote workers powers the OnlyFans platform, where they photoshop nudes, edit porn videos, and sell explicit content on behalf of foreign female models. Accounts from two workers reveal how agencies rely on cheap offshore labor from the Philippines to boost models' earnings. This setup emerged as part of a larger industry that took off during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Young Swedes are falling into financial troubles due to simple food orders via apps like Foodora and unexpected costs when moving out from home. A debt advisor warns of a society where consumption happens before payment. Even stable families are affected as the economy worsens.

AIによるレポート

Hundreds of workers gathered at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi on Sunday to protest against four new labour codes implemented by the central government. Workers claim these codes undermine their welfare and leave them vulnerable. The codes replace 29 older central labour laws.

Nitibha Kaul, known from Bigg Boss 10, recently got engaged to her boyfriend and is preparing for marriage soon. She left her job at Google to become a social media influencer, where she earns substantially.

AIによるレポート

若いアメリカ人たちは、労働市場の縮小と住宅不足に悩まされる厳しい経済の中で、KalshiやPolymarketなどの暗号通貨や賭けプラットフォームにますます傾倒している。高齢世代が金融的な安定を楽しむ一方で、若者は住宅所有や家族形成の障壁に直面している。この変化は、伝統的な富への道に対する増大する苛立ちを反映している。

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否