Are gig workers the future of finance?

On-demand talent may hold the secret to navigating the new normal of business

Are gig workers the future of finance?

Are gig workers a rarity in the finance sector? On-demand talent makes up just five per cent of the current workforce. In the next five years, however, this pool is forecast to take on as much as 20% of the workload at most financial institutions. More than half of financial services firms (52%) surveyed by PwC said they plan to expand their on-demand talent in the next three to five years.

These aren’t your everyday rank-and-file positions: gig workers in finance bring with them “specialist skill sets” to help firms navigate in the new normal of business, PwC analysts said. The entry of gig workers and contractors, who can take on full-time roles for a specific function or engagement, provides companies with a mobile army that can get up to speed on projects just as the firm is scaling up or restructuring.

Read more: Is the gig economy 'exploitative'?

“Gig economy workers also add value by immediately bringing the digital skills needed by financial services firms – to improve functions such as customer experience and improving institutional resilience – while the full-time workforce is being upskilled,” said Nicole Wakefield, Global Financial Services Advisory Leader at PwC Singapore.

In the digital economy, the demand for technically proficient finance professionals is pushing firms to upskill both their in-house and outsourced teams. However, while on-demand talent are believed to have greater exposure to the latest software and platforms that are now reshaping the finance and fintech sectors, “most institutions still rely primarily on full-time and part-time employees” in-house because of their concerns over confidentiality (44%) and regulatory risk (42%). For some companies, it may be a matter of knowing where to deploy tenured employees – and when to bring in gig workers and contractors.

Read more: Surge in demand for contingent workers

“Leaders in the industry are looking seriously at their workforces to evaluate which roles need to be performed by permanent employees and which can be performed by gig-economy workers, contractors or even crowd-sourced on a case-by-case basis,” said John Garvey, Global Financial Services Leader at PwC US.

“COVID-19 and remote working have opened the door to accessing talent outside of a firm’s physical location, including outside of the country. What we are seeing now is a talent marketplace for gig workers in financial services, competing to take advantage of their specialist skill set and boost productivity within their businesses,” Garvey said.

“Many of the most valuable companies in the world share one thing in common: they have embraced the platform economy as a business model. They operate with relatively few full-time employees and an increasing percentage of gig-economy talent and skills that they can access on-demand, making the organisations far more innovative, nimble and cost-efficient,” he said.

Recent articles & video

'Unpaid' worker claims constructive dismissal

Manager wins over $22,000 for unjustified disadvantage, dismissal

How criminal charges impact employment investigations

New Zealand employers ready to pay more for employees with AI skills

Most Read Articles

Blenheim worker wins $16,000 in damages over unjust dismissal claim

Recap: Winners of the 2024 HRD Awards New Zealand

Best practice for handling fixed-term agreements in New Zealand