Historic Vote: ILO Establishes First Global Labor Standards for Gig Workers
In a landmark decision, the International Labour Organization (ILO) has agreed to adopt the first set of binding international employment standards for gig workers. The new convention aims to secure fundamental rights regarding pay, workplace safety, and social benefits for millions of people working in the platform economy, such as ride-hailing and food delivery.
While the agreement is a major milestone, it still requires ratification by individual national governments to become enforceable law.
What the New Standards Include:
The convention establishes a baseline of protections that apply to platform workers regardless of whether they are legally classified as employees or independent contractors. Key provisions include:
- Basic Protections: Guarantees for minimum remuneration, occupational health and safety, and defense against arbitrary deactivation or termination.
- Algorithmic Transparency: Unprecedented international rules requiring digital platforms to disclose how and when automated systems are used to dictate pay, assign tasks, and manage worker access to jobs.
The Vote and U.S. Opposition.
The convention passed with overwhelming support. A total of 406 members—including representatives from China, Japan, Germany, France, and South Africa—voted in favor.
However, eight nations, notably the United States and New Zealand, cast opposing votes, while 36 countries, including the U.K. and India, abstained. Explaining the U.S. opposition, representative Lorenzo Riboni argued against imposing strict regulations on a rapidly evolving sector, stating that "overly rigid rules hinder innovation and harm workers that they intend to help."
Why This Matters for Gig Workers
The push for these standards comes as the gig economy continues to expand globally, with the World Bank estimating that between 154 million and 435 million people worldwide rely on app-based work.
Advocates argue that the current model, which frequently classifies workers as independent contractors, allows corporations to bypass minimum wage laws and avoid providing benefits. Highlighting this issue, a 2025 Human Rights Watch (HRW) report revealed that U.S. gig workers take home a median of just $5.12 per hour after expenses—roughly 30% below the federal minimum wage.
Amanda Brown, vice chair of the ILO's Workers' Group, celebrated the agreement as a watershed moment. "For the first time in the history of international law, the women and men who move our cities, who clean and care in our homes ... will be named, recognised and protected by a binding international standard," she told delegates.
Next Steps and Enforcement
Despite the historic vote, significant hurdles remain. The ILO itself lacks direct enforcement powers. However, member states can file complaints that could trigger investigations and exert diplomatic pressure on non-compliant governments.
Lena Simet, a senior advisor on economic justice at Human Rights Watch, called the convention a "breakthrough" but emphasized that it is merely a starting point. "It is a floor, not a ceiling," Simet noted, urging governments to ratify the agreement and close loopholes for misclassified workers.
Ultimately, if a country ratifies the convention and integrates it into its domestic legal framework, it could open the door for individual gig workers to take platform companies to court over labor violations.
