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The balkanisation of gig work
Financial Express Bengaluru
|January 16, 2026
WHEN STATES DESIGN THEIR OWN RULES IN ISOLATION, THEY CREATE UNEVEN PLAYING FIELDS
THE ROAD TO regulatory hell is often paved with uncoordinated legislation. As India attempts to formalise the social security net for its burgeoning gig economy, we are witnessing a fracturing of the national market that threatens to undo the very welfare gains it seeks to achieve. The recent legislative manoeuvres by states like Jharkhand and Karnataka, while born of a noble intent to protect the precariat, have stumbled into a thicket of economic distortion. By deviating from the architectural blueprint of the Central Code on Social Security (CoSS), 2020, these state-level bills are engineering a constitutional absurdity.
The result is a balkanised regulatory regime that penalises domestic entrepreneurship and enfeebles the platforms relied upon to sustain gig livelihoods. This acts as a penalty on the digital model itself. It exposes a fundamental flaw in the current legislative trend: When states design their own rules in isolation, they create uneven playing fields that incentivise regulatory arbitrage rather than genuine welfare.
The Parliament passed CoSS in 2020 with a vision of a unified national architecture. A delivery partner’s livelihood does not adhere to the administrative boundaries of a district or a state. A student working in Ranchi today might move to a metro city like Delhi tomorrow, expecting their work history and accumulated benefits to travel with them.
State-specific legislation ignores this reality. By erecting silos of welfare, states are creating a scenario where a worker’s benefits are trapped in the jurisdiction where they were working. If Jharkhand has one set of rules and Karnataka another, does a worker migrating between the two lose their safety net? Do they have to register twice? The friction this introduces defeats the very purpose of the Central Code designed to offer a safety net as flexible and mobile as the workers it protects.
This story is from the January 16, 2026 edition of Financial Express Bengaluru.
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