Analyzing how compensation structures reveal and enforce power dynamics between platforms and workers in gig arrangements.
For Yacob, money is never merely transactional—it expresses relationships of power and value. In gig economy contexts, compensation structures reveal who controls what. Algorithms that adjust pay rates unilaterally, tips that subsidize platform underpayment, and opaque pricing that workers cannot negotiate or understand: these monetary arrangements encode platform power. Yacob's analytical approach reveals that gig economy payment structures are not neutral mechanisms but tools for control. When workers cannot see how algorithms calculate their earnings, when platforms capture transaction value while treating workers as variable costs, when income arrives inconsistently, money becomes a mechanism of subordination disguised as exchange. This framework illuminates why gig economy pay discussions must center on power: who decides rates, who captures surplus value, who bears financial risk? Understanding money as a power relationship transforms gig economy criticism from focusing solely on wage levels toward examining the entire structure of economic control embedded in compensation systems.
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