Uganda must act now on digital workers’ rights

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A quiet revolution is unfolding across Uganda. It is not happening in factories, industrial parks or government offices. It is happening on smartphones. Every day, thousands of boda riders, delivery workers, online freelancers and digital traders log into platforms that now connect them to customers, jobs and income with unprecedented ease. For many young Ugandans, the digital economy has become a pathway out of unemployment and a rare source of opportunity in a labour market that struggles to absorb new entrants each year. Yet the rise of platform work forces a deeper question. When technology creates new jobs, who ensures those jobs are fair, secure and dignified? The adoption of the Convention on Decent Work in the Platform Economy at the International Labour Conference in Geneva is significant not because it regulates apps. It is significant because it confronts a growing contradiction at the heart of modern economies. Digital platforms have generated enormous efficiencies and new forms of work, but they have also shifted risks from companies to workers. For a traditional employee, labour rights are generally clear. There are rules governing wages, workplace safety, dispute resolution and social protection. Platform workers often occupy a grey area. They provide labour that generates value, yet many remain outside conventional employment protections. The consequences are visible everywhere. A driver can be suspended by an algorithm without understanding the reason. A delivery worker may see earnings fluctuate according to opaque platform decisions. An online freelancer can lose access to clients because of automated systems that offer little explanation or appeal. The central moral question is: should technology be allowed to outpace worker protection? This question is particularly urgent. Uganda has one of the world’s youngest populations. Policymakers rightly celebrate digital platforms for creating employment opportunities through services such as SafeBoda, Uber, Bolt, Glovo and online marketplaces. These platforms lower barriers to entry and expand economic participation. But job creation alone is not enough. The quality of those jobs matters just as much as their quantity. This is where the Geneva Convention offers an important opportunity. Its emphasis on fair pay, social security, workplace safety, non-discrimination and transparency in algorithmic decision-making recognises that technological innovation should not come at the expense of basic labour rights. However, international conventions do not improve lives on their own. Their value depends entirely on domestic implementation. Uganda’s challenge is therefore no longer diplomatic but institutional. Can regulators modernise labour laws quickly enough to keep pace with technological change? Can enforcement agencies monitor increasingly complex digital workplaces? Can policymakers create social protection systems that accommodate workers whose employment status does not fit traditional categories? The answer will require more than legislation. It demands stronger labour market data, effective social dialogue between government, employers and workers, and the political will to recognise platform workers as an essential part of the economy rather than an afterthought. Encouragingly, discussions around the Employment (Amendment) Act, the proposed Tripartite Minimum Wages Advisory Board and the National Apprenticeship Programme suggest that some of these foundations are already being considered. The stakes extend beyond labour policy. They touch on the kind of economy Uganda wants to build. A digital economy that creates jobs without protections may deliver growth statistics, but it risks producing a generation trapped in insecurity. A digital economy that combines innovation with fairness can create both prosperity and social stability.The post Uganda must act now on digital workers’ rights appeared first on The Observer Media Ltd.