Freelance, "remote", project contract, platform instead of employer – for people under 35 this is often the normal path, not an "unconventional choice". The generation that entered the labor market with a smartphone in hand and a profile on several platforms, pushed forward the idea that a career can consist of a series of projects, not a single "lifelong" employer. The question becomes more acute when we look a little further ahead: what does this "gig"-economy mean for people 40+ and for pension systems that are built around a different reality?
Freedom and flexibility – but at what price after 40?
For many people around and over 40, freelancing and gig-work are either a "second career" after corporate burnout or a forced choice after layoffs. In the short term, the advantages are clear: more control over time, the ability to choose projects, the freedom to work from different places. Many specialists at this age use freelancing to stay active without going through the stress of office politics and hierarchies.
But over the years, other numbers also come to the fore: irregular income, periods without orders, lack of paid leave and sick leave, higher personal insurance contributions. If at 25 "there is no problem" to earn a few weaker months, at 45, with a loan and children, this means anxious nights, not a "temporary adventure".
Gig-economy without social buffers
Classic employment – like it or not – comes with a package of social protections: the employer covers part of the insurance, there is paid leave, sick leave, unemployment benefits and automatic pension contributions. In the gig model, a large part of these buffers disappear or fall entirely on the person themselves. Platforms and clients pay a "net" sum per task, and the freelancer must set aside for taxes, health and pension contributions, insurance.
In theory, this is a matter of discipline. In practice, when income is unpredictable, it is tempting to "skip this month" the contributions or pay only the minimum. Many self-employed and freelancers in Europe admit that they do not have a separate pension plan or fund it irregularly. For people over 40, this means not just a smaller "cushion", but a real risk of poverty in later life.
Pension systems in a world of projects
Today's pension systems – whether state, professional or mixed – are built on the idea of long years of contributions on a relatively predictable income. The flow of contributions from current workers must cover the pensions of today's pensioners. When more and more people switch to self-employed status, periodic contracts and platforms, the picture becomes more complicated.
On the one hand, the state receives less stable revenues in the pension funds. On the other hand – a generation of workers with a "cut" insurance history is looming on the horizon: years with good income, but low contributions; years without income; work in different countries without clearly tracked rights. This is not an abstract scenario, but a real reason for international organizations and experts to insist on reforms – from greater portability of pension rights between countries and statuses, to new models for "automatic" inclusion of the self-employed in basic pension schemes.
Can the gig-economy work for people 40+?
For some people over 40, gig-work is a chance to stay active in a softer way: to reduce hours, to work more selectively, to supplement pensions or savings. For others – especially those without a stable professional profile or with lower pay – it is a trap of insecurity. Without insurance, without a plan, without a clear horizon, the gig-economy can turn into a long corridor between "I'm not a pensioner yet" and "I can't afford to stop working".
The solution is not to "ban" freelancing, but to make it more compatible with human life: clearer rules for platforms, minimum social standards for the self-employed, incentives for voluntary and professional pension schemes that also work for people in project mode. And on a personal level – an honest conversation with the numbers: how much do I need to live decently after 60; what contributions do I make; what will happen if I am without projects for a few months?
Between freedom and security: personal choices and general rules
The freelance generation brought a valuable change – the idea that a career can be more flexible, that you don't have to sit at one desk for 30 years to be "successful". But freedom without a framework easily turns into fatigue and fear of the future. In the end, the sustainable economy for people 40+ is not the one in which everyone is a freelancer or everyone is "on staff". It is the one in which the different forms of work go with clear rights, predictable insurance mechanisms and a real opportunity for a person to grow old without fear of how they will pay their bills.
Whether the gig-economy will lead us to such a balance depends not only on the platforms and employers, but also on the policies we write today – and on how much the generations that are already living "on a project" will insist that their voice be heard before it's too late.