The largest theft in America has no mugshot, no perp walk, and no prime-time coverage.
Every year, employers steal more from American workers than all robberies, burglaries, larcenies, and motor vehicle thefts combined. They call it unpaid overtime, tip skimming, illegal deductions, and minimum wage violations. The federal government calls it “wage theft.” Most Americans have never heard the term.
Calling a worker an “independent contractor” instead of an employee saves companies roughly 30% on labor costs — no payroll tax, no benefits, no overtime, no workers’ comp. The worker absorbs all of that. Misclassification isn’t a loophole; it’s a business model.
“Misclassification lets companies offload business risk onto individual workers while pocketing the tax and benefit savings. The worker gets the gig. The company gets the margin.”
| Benefit / Protection | W-2 Employee | 1099 Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Wage Guarantee | Yes | No |
| Overtime Pay | Yes (FLSA) | No |
| Employer Payroll Tax Contribution | Yes (7.65%) | Worker pays full 15.3% |
| Workers’ Compensation | Yes | No |
| Unemployment Insurance | Yes | No |
| Right to Organize / Union | Yes (NLRA) | No |
| Employer Health Benefits (50+ workers) | Required (ACA) | No |
| FMLA Protection | Yes (50+ workers) | No |
Platform companies advertise hourly earnings before expenses. The actual number — after fuel, vehicle wear, insurance, platform fees, and self-employment tax — tells a very different story. Workers on some platforms earn less per hour than federal minimum wage.
Wage theft doesn’t happen equally across the workforce. It concentrates where workers have the least power to push back: Black and Latino workers, immigrants, women in tipped industries, and workers in non-union jobs. This isn’t a coincidence — it’s a pattern.
The Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor is the primary federal agency responsible for wage theft enforcement. In 2025, staffing reached its lowest point since 1973. One investigator per 270,000 workers. The math is not meant to work.
In 2020, Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, and Instacart spent $224 million — the most expensive ballot campaign in California history — to pass Proposition 22. It exempted gig workers from AB5, the law that would have reclassified them as employees. The California Supreme Court upheld Prop 22 in July 2024. The corporate playbook is now a template.