Libmonster ID: IN-2138

The Vulnerability of the Modern Worker: A Multidimensional Analysis in the Context of Neoliberal Flexibility

The vulnerability of the modern worker is a systemic property arising from fundamental shifts in the organization of labor, the welfare state, and the psychological contract between the worker and the employer. It is not just the risk of losing a job but a comprehensive state of insecurity affecting economic, legal, psychological, and social dimensions. Its manifestations are structural in nature and are exacerbated in the era of digitalization and globalization.

Economic Vulnerability: Precarization and the "Eternal Instability" Syndrome

Spread of non-standard employment. The share of workers on temporary, fixed-term, part-time contracts, outsourcing, and self-employment is steadily increasing. For example, in the EU, about 14% of workers have temporary contracts, and in the age group of 15-24, this figure reaches 40%. Such a worker lives in a state of permanent search for the next contract, without guarantees for tomorrow.

Constricted circle of low income and high cost of living. In many sectors (especially in the gig economy, retail, services), wages have stagnated at a level not corresponding to the growth in housing, education, and healthcare costs. This creates the phenomenon of the "working poor" — a person who is formally employed but unable to save or ensure social mobility. Even in developed countries, as the OECD study shows, the growth in labor productivity since the 1990s has significantly outpaced the growth in wages for the average worker.

Lack of savings and pension uncertainty. Unstable income and a high proportion of expenses for current needs prevent the formation of a "financial cushion." At the same time, there is a shift from solidarity pension systems to accumulative ones, transferring the risks of investment and longevity from the state and the company to the worker, whose contributions may be interrupted due to periods of unemployment.

Legal and Social Vulnerability: Erosion of Labor Guarantees

Blurring of the standard labor contract. The classic contract with an indefinite term, a social package, and clear guarantees is giving way to various hybrid forms (part-time employment, self-employment, platform labor), which often exclude the right to paid leave, sick leave, protection from unjustified dismissal, collective negotiations. For example, a delivery courier, formally considered a "partner" of the platform, is deprived of all labor rights.

Algorithmic management and digital control. In the platform economy and increasingly in offices, management is carried out through algorithms, ratings, and KPIs. This creates a new type of vulnerability: accountability and opacity of decisions. The worker cannot challenge the decision of an algorithm that lowered his rating and deprived him of income, or talk to a "robot" about personal circumstances. Total surveillance systems (time trackers, activity analysis) increase pressure and the feeling of constant observation.

Weak positions for collective protection. Precarization and individualization of labor relations undermine the foundations of trade union movement. Workers are disunited (remote work, different projects, competition), making collective resistance almost impossible.

Psychological Vulnerability: Burnout Syndrome and Existential Anxiety

Culture of flexibility and "always-on" culture. Expectation of constant availability, blurring of boundaries between work and personal life (especially in remote format) lead to chronic stress, emotional burnout, and the professional "impostor syndrome." The worker feels the need to prove his value at all times.

The need for continuous self-education (lifelong learning) and the fear of devaluation of skills. In conditions of rapid technological change (AI, automation), the worker is forced to learn continuously, often at his own expense and time. This gives rise to existential anxiety about future professional irrelevance.

Loss of professional identity. Project-based, fragmented work, where a person performs narrow tasks in different contexts, prevents the formation of a holistic professional "self." This leads to anomie — the loss of meaning and orientation in labor activity.

Social and Spatial Vulnerability

Dependency on renting housing. In large cities, where jobs are concentrated, high real estate prices make the worker a victim of the rental market. The risk of losing income directly threatens the loss of housing.

Vulnerability of migrants and discriminated groups. These groups face double or triple vulnerability: due to legal status, language barrier, discrimination, they often occupy the most unstable and low-paying niches, afraid to complain about the conditions.

Regional vulnerability. Workers in monocities or depressed regions are extremely dependent on the state of one enterprise or industry, being deprived of alternatives on the local labor market.

Interesting Fact: "The LinkedIn Phenomenon"

The professional social network LinkedIn has become not only a tool for job search but also a source of new vulnerability. The continuous stream of posts about others' successes, courses, requirements for "current skills" creates a chronic feeling of professional inadequacy and fear of falling behind, which researchers call "LinkedIn anxiety."

Conclusion: Vulnerability as a Systemic Quality

The vulnerability of the modern worker is not a sum of random misfortunes but a direct consequence of the dominant economic model based on the principles of maximum flexibility, individualization of risks, and minimizing labor costs. It is total in nature: from the inability to plan a personal budget to the loss of meaning in professional activity.

This vulnerability is reproduced and exacerbated by technologies (algorithmic management), institutions (weakened labor legislation), and culture (the requirement of constant availability and success). As a result, the XXI-century worker is increasingly in a position of a "human orchestra," forced to be a highly qualified performer, manager of his own career, financial planner, and a permanent student at the same time, bearing all the risks alone.

Overcoming this multidimensional vulnerability requires not individual survival strategies (which are important but insufficient), but systemic changes: a review of labor legislation to protect workers in new forms of employment, the development of universal social guarantees (such as unconditional basic income), strengthening collective institutions, and forming a new ethics of labor, where the value of a person is not reduced to his immediate economic usefulness. Without this, vulnerability will only increase, threatening not only the well-being of individual people but also social stability as a whole.


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Analysis of the Vulnerability of the Modern Worker // Delhi: India (ELIB.ORG.IN). Updated: 26.12.2025. URL: https://elib.org.in/m/articles/view/Analysis-of-the-Vulnerability-of-the-Modern-Worker (date of access: 08.06.2026).

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