This is big.
You may or may not be aware that the U. S. Department of Labor discontinued its Contingent Worker Supplement (CWS) reporting in 2005, some years prior to the acceleration we've seen in the so-called "gig economy."
You may or may not be aware that former Secretary of Labor Tom Perez had sought to revive that reporting in the last months of his service to the DOL.
After many futile online searches, I was able to confirm online (and by phone to the DOL) this morning that Perez did succeed in his request to restore the reporting and that the collection of data to support it did take place in May 2017, under the new administration.
Interested readers may review the DOL's funding request submitted to the Office of Management and Budget last year to obtain a fuller understanding of the rationale for collecting the data, what process the data collection took, and how the data collected will be used by the DOL and policymakers (from the above link, click on the very first document listed to the upper left, "Supporting Statement A: CPS Contingent Worker," which is 18 pages; note that a second document part of the funding request is "Supporting Statement B," which explains the DOL's data collection process in greater detail).
Also at this link to the funding request are further links to the Public Comments from seven organizations monitoring the data collection with interest, six of them pleased to see this effort underway.
As to the date the DOL expects to release its findings, "Supporting Statement A" concludes as follows (page 18):
The supplement is expected to be collected in May 2017 during the week containing the 19th of the month. Processing of this supplement will begin the month following the collection. Survey results will appear first as a news release several months after the CWS is collected.
These news releases will be published in electronic and paper formats. The electronic news release will be posted on the BLS webpage at (link...), the Census Bureau will release a public use version of the microdata after the publication of the news release.
Note that until the DOL ceased collecting and reporting these data in 2005, the Department had undertaken this effort every two years, starting in 1995.
|
|
Discussing:
- Alcoa Hwy construction to extend to 2030 (2 replies)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (3 replies)
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
TN Progressive
- Alcoa property taxes will probably not go up (BlountViews)
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Stockard on the Stump: Don’t bet your life savings on a gubernatorial debate (TN Lookout)
- Trump couldn’t send troops to the polls without approval of Congress under Dem bill (TN Lookout)
- More Americans are hungry in the face of federal cuts, rising grocery prices (TN Lookout)
- 60-day clock starts for negotiations with Iran over strait, nuclear future (TN Lookout)
- Feds seek dismissal of xAI lawsuit in Memphis and Mississippi (TN Lookout)
- FEMA nominee pressed on whether Trump favors disaster funding requests from GOP states (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- Play catch with Lady Vols softball players (Knox TN Today)
- Norris Lake at Oak Grove + Beaver Creek + West Hills picnic (Knox TN Today)
- Dishing It Out: Million Dollar Spaghetti (Knox TN Today)
- Close to Home, Far from Ordinary: East Tennessee ghost stories and local legends (Knox TN Today)
- William Carder, Powell, crowned Tennessee’s Best Bagger (Knox TN Today)
- Bisky is a special resident at Zoo Knoxville (Knox TN Today)
- Dining Duo gives statistics plus two favorite pizza eats (Knox TN Today)
- Hiking with Harrington: Rich Mt. Road (Knox TN Today)
- Plant flowers like wildlife depends on it. They do! (Knox TN Today)
- 6/19 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- Unmasking bright futures for pets at Mask-Fur-Ade 2026 (Knox TN Today)
- Belmont Blooms (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Knoxville celebrates US World Cup win at raucous downtown watch party (WATE)
- 'Better than before' Sevierville attraction continues recovery months after large fire (WATE)
- Hundreds gather in Knoxville for MLK Parade and Juneteenth celebration (WATE)
- Oak Ridge paramedic's heart attack survival underscores importance of men's health awareness (WATE)
- Driver charged with kidnapping after Knox County police pursuit ends in crash (WATE)
- Alcoa resurfacing, road work to impact East Tennessee drivers this weekend (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Collegedale police say teen confessed involvement in homicide. Landfill search called off - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Chicken plant neighbors lament job losses, but they won’t mourn the smell - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- New Chattanooga senior center space estimated to open in fall with $231K lease - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Memorandum of Understanding - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Trump unveils new Air Force One, a $400 million plane gifted by Qatar - CBS News (US News)
- Flu sickens scores of troops at Air Force base after Pentagon ends vaccine requirement - NBC News (US News)
- Iran Delays Nuclear Talks With US as Lebanon Clashes Worsen - Bloomberg (US News)
- The blue paint is peeling off the Reflecting Pool - The Washington Post (US News)
- Italy's Meloni, once Trump's closest ally in Europe, says he made up a story about her - NPR (US News)
- Federal judge gives DOJ green light to turn Biden’s audio files over to the Heritage Foundation - Politico (US News)
- As Juneteenth is celebrated across the US, Obama’s presidential center opens in Chicago - AP News (US News)
- Exclusive: Trump tells "The Axios Show" that Anthropic was a national security threat - Axios (Business)
- The Trump administration says it is cutting student loan interest. Not everyone qualifies. - CBS News (Business)
- Mortgage rates fall to lowest level in over a month as Iran deal framework takes shape - Fox Business (Business)
- Oil Prices Rise as U.S.-Iran Deal Faces Tests - The New York Times (Business)
- Oil tanker traffic in Strait of Hormuz jumps after U.S. and Iran implement deal to open sea lane - CNBC (US News)
- SpaceX stock price drops after Cursor purchase. How low could it go? - Mashable (Business)
- Juneteenth National Independence Day: Closures and service changes in Columbus - NBC4 WCMH-TV (Business)
- U.S.-Iran talks postponed; oil on pace for weekly decline - what’s moving markets - Yahoo Finance (Business)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

*
Allow me to clarify that while this link to the DOL's funding request for this project doesn't in any way confirm that the request was funded or that the data collection took place as scheduled, it was in my telephone call to the DOL this morning that Department personnel confirmed both actions had taken place. Compilation of the report is underway now, personnel told me.
*
Until such time as the DOL compiles and releases its data, a "2016 Fact Sheet" compiled by the AFL-CIO highlights the rate at which the contingent workforce appears to have increased, but also reveals the complexity of how to measure its size (scroll half-way through report to heading entitled "Contingent Workforce Size Estimates").
As to a baseline, the Fact Sheet cites the last 2005 CPS contingent worker supplement, which "estimated the contingent workforce to be 14.8 million" and "includes independent contractors, on-call workers, temporary help agency workers, and workers provided by contract firms."
The AFL-CIO fact sheet does cite a more recent study by economists Lawrence Katz and Alan Krueger for the Rand Corporation which showed that the contingent worker count "rose from 10.1 percent in 2005 to 15.8 percent in 2015," using the same definitions of "contingent worker" the CPS had previously used.
The AFL-CIO Fact Sheet also cites a second study conducted in 2015, this one by MBO Partners, which showed 16.9 million full-time and 12.4 million part-time contingent workers. Relying on 2014 data from the BLS citing 150.5 million total jobs across all industries in that year prior (I couldn't immediately spot 2015 data), this measure would place contingent workers as a percentage of the total workforce at approximately 19.5 percent in 2015. Note that MBO's definition of what constitutes a "contingent worker" is hazy and also note that this study polled only people with access to the internet.
Finally, the Fact Sheet cites The Freelancers Union, an organization that “promotes the interests of independent workers through advocacy, education, and services,” which estimates that there are 54 million contingent workers in the U.S., or about 33 percent, presumably as of 2016. The Freelancers Union defines the contingent workforce more broadly, to include contract company workers, agency temps, on-call workers/day laborers, direct-hire temps, and independent contractors, as well as self-employed and part-time workers.
You have also seen me link here a May 2015 article in Forbes which in turn cites an April 2015 GAO study. In the absence of the CPS Contingent Worker Supplement discontinued in 2005, the GAO study relied upon a "less statistically robust" mishmash of data from other federal surveys. Using the broadest of definitions for what constitutes the "contingent workforce" and estimating its size at the shakiest point in our recent economic history, the GAO pegged its size at up to 40.4 percent in 2010.
You see, then, the need to better define what constitutes a "contingent worker" and to collect a "more statistically robust" count of his incidence in the workplace.
Meanwhile, all that's known for sure is that contingent workers are on the rise.