Summer 2020 | Page 6

time employment to flexible, platform work or even unpaid work that contributes to social value creation. This increasingly complex environment requires a new social contract for work between governments, businesses, social partners and workers. Acknowledging the multiple challenges in writing a new social contract for work, The Adecco Group is offering a platform for discussion and some first elements to consider. We believe: • Governments, employers and social partners should design new models and update existing regulation to ensure that all work opportunities, including freelancing, are secure and sustainable for workers and businesses alike. • When there is a de facto employment relationship between a platform and a worker, it should be defined and treated as such, and all relevant rights and obligations should apply to both parties. • We are committed to providing freelancers and everyone who is part of the workforce with fair remuneration and the benefits they need. • One-size-fit-all solutions are not the answer. • Some situations could arise where vulnerable workers, including freelancers, should be offered additional protection by Government. • The build-up of social protection should be individual, portable and transferable. “You can look at the debate around social protection and platform workers negatively or positively,” says Professor Schoukens of the University of Leuven. “Negatively, you can see it as a kind of danger or challenge to existing protections. Positively, I see it as an invitation to rethink our systems in order to make sure that they’re up to meeting future needs.” In other I see it as an invitation to rethink our systems in order to make sure that they’re up to meeting future needs Professor Schoukens, University of Leuven