HomeNewsHealth & FitnessHealing Space | How the IT sector created the moonlighter
Trending Topics

Healing Space | How the IT sector created the moonlighter

In a gig economy, when workers are on contract, frequently benched, and often uncertain about job security, to demand loyalty is exploitative.

September 24, 2022 / 20:43 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Use your existing skills for moonlighting. Ask why you're doing it, and quit when that need is met. (Illustration by Suneesh K)
Use your existing skills for moonlighting. Ask why you're doing it, and quit when that need is met. (Illustration by Suneesh K)

Note to readers: Healing Space is a weekly series that helps you dive into your mental health and take charge of your wellbeing through practical DIY self-care methods.

Rishad Premji’s Wipro this week fired 300 employees who were found moonlighting. But the axing is unsympathetic and questionable for more than simply human-resources reasons.

Story continues below Advertisement

The question of moonlighting, offering work for compensation to an employer not your own, is at its core a question of who owns the output of the mind of the worker. If you insist on laying claim to the product of the mind of the worker after work hours, and you run a business that does not adhere to strict work hours or offer overtime or structure work in a systematic fashion, then you are seeking to own the worker.

The unawareness is remarkable because it is the IT sector that normalized the gig economy that we inhabit today, as it has huge cost and variability benefits for the organization. It gives companies that work on this model access to a varied resource pool, pushes down compensation, benefits, and allows them to hold workers in reserve, sucking up resources that competitors may access to dry out the market. It is gig workers, or workers in organisations that treat them like gig workers, employing them on a project basis and subject to short-term contracts, research shows us, who have had to adapt like all animals in an evolving sociology. Our question is not a legal one but a mental health one—one of an individual’s space for self-determination, self-identity, and autonomy, the right to be more than a moveable and ownable asset and what being held as one does to the self-image.