The State of Gig Economy in South Carolina. Statistics and Trends [2022]

The sales and receipts from the gig work in South Carolina have increased over 51% in the last decade. Read along to get more insights on the trends for the rise of the freelance, independent and gig work in South Carolina.
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Updated Dec 10, 2022

The rise of the industrial economy in the 70s had the working population in South Carolina strive to get a full time job with an employer and show up for work. It has been the norm for decades, but if we study the shift in employment statistics closely, there is a big revolution in the making.

The working population in South Carolina is currently witnessing a post-industrial shift into a self dependent economy. Gen Z doesn’t want to fit in the industrial complex and look for flexibility and satisfaction in their job. 

How big is the gig economy workforce in South Carolina?

31% of the small business workforce in South Carolina work as independent workers.

Comparative analysis of gig economy and employment datasets for small businesses suggest a dramatic shift in how working population in South Carolina work: 31% of the small business workforce work as independent workers. In South Carolina there are 380,729 self employed gig workers ( freelancers and contractors ) compared to 837,615 salaried employees in small business payroll ( firms with less than 500 employees).

The gig economy workforce of self employed independent contractors, freelancers, also identified as non employer firms are becoming an important factor in South Carolina. As per the current 2019 NES ( released on June 30, 2022) there are 380,729 gig businesses in South Carolina, up from 295,574 in 2010. 


Year No. of gig workers Receipts ($billion)
2010 295,574 11
2011 301,675 12
2012 304,327 13
2013 308,746 13
2014 319,046 13
2015 329,431 14
2016 339,739 15
2017 351,453 15
2018 363,971 16
2019 380,729 17
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This increase in the gig worker population can be safely related to increase in employment opportunities created by the rise of online platforms such as Uber, Lyft, Airbnb, TaskRabbit.

Which industries contribute the most to the gig economy in South Carolina?

The sector " Other Services (except Public Administration) " contributed the most whereas the lowest contribution came from Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction sector.

We aim to look at the distribution of gig economy workforce across broad 17 industry levels as defined under NAICS. As per the current 2019 NES ( released on June 30, 2022), there are 10 sectors with more than 25,000 gig workers. The sector " Other Services (except Public Administration) " contributed the most with the number of gig workers as 49,600. The lowest contributor to the gig economy was the Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction sector with just 83 gig workers across South Carolina. The number of gig "businesses" according to the respective industry sectors is exhibited in the table below.

Exhibit 1


Industry Gig workers in 2010 Gig workers in 2019 Growth Growth (%)
Transportation and Warehousing 12,027 28,573 16,546 138
Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services 31,050 44,739 13,689 44
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services 32,968 46,090 13,122 40
Real Estate and Rental and Leasing 34,154 43,748 9,594 28
Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation 13,014 19,637 6,623 51
Health Care and Social Assistance 20,347 26,425 6,078 30
Educational Services 6,700 12,471 5,771 86
Construction 36,480 42,162 5,682 16
Retail Trade 26,952 31,850 4,898 18
Accommodation and Food Services 5,036 7,606 2,570 51
Manufacturing 3,759 4,707 948 25
Finance and Insurance 9,855 10,779 924 9
Information 3,126 3,773 647 21
Wholesale Trade 4,981 5,200 219 4
Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction 54 83 29 54
Utilities 237 170 -67 -28
Other Services (except Public Administration) 52,170 49,600 -2,570 -5
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The next important thing to analyze is change in the gig economy workforce across different industries over the last decade. This analysis will help us determine the true drivers in the rise of gig economy in South Carolina. Analysis of the data suggests that the biggest driver in the gig economy across South Carolina is the Transportation and Warehousingsector. The number of gig workers increased by 138% from 12,027 in 2010, increasing to 28,573 in the data from the current reference year NES 2019. 

For the same time period, the biggest loss of 2,570 was witnessed in the Other Services (except Public Administration) sector. The overall decline in this sector over the last decade was at 5%, witnessing a decrease to 49,600 ( in 2019 ) from 52,170 ( in 2010).

The change in the number of gig "businesses" according to the respective industry sectors over the data analysis of last 10 reference years in NES is exhibited in the table below.


County Gig workers in 2012 Gig workers in 2019 Growth Growth (%)
Greenville 33,489 44,368 10,879 32
Charleston 31,967 42,837 10,870 34
Horry 21,452 29,766 8,314 39
York 14,661 20,303 5,642 38
Spartanburg 17,568 23,066 5,498 31
Berkeley 10,811 16,118 5,307 49
Beaufort 13,589 18,406 4,817 35
Richland 24,879 29,644 4,765 19
Lexington 18,171 21,574 3,403 19
Dorchester 8,358 11,370 3,012 36
Aiken 9,815 11,819 2,004 20
Lancaster 4,768 6,562 1,794 38
Anderson 11,809 13,486 1,677 14
Pickens 7,127 8,316 1,189 17
Georgetown 5,031 5,897 866 17
Kershaw 3,829 4,693 864 23
Jasper 1,482 2,264 782 53
Oconee 4,420 5,199 779 18
Laurens 3,219 3,697 478 15
Orangeburg 4,789 5,235 446 9
Colleton 2,790 3,224 434 16
Sumter 5,943 6,339 396 7
Newberry 1,820 2,213 393 22
Edgefield 1,305 1,641 336 26
Florence 8,468 8,766 298 4
Greenwood 3,841 4,030 189 5
Chester 1,595 1,738 143 9
Saluda 935 1,074 139 15
Hampton 1,082 1,216 134 12
Dillon 1,536 1,657 121 8
Marlboro 961 1,075 114 12
Cherokee 2,508 2,620 112 4
Clarendon 2,173 2,271 98 5
Chesterfield 2,289 2,373 84 4
Bamberg 774 847 73 9
Fairfield 1,387 1,459 72 5
Marion 1,597 1,658 61 4
Abbeville 1,392 1,442 50 4
Union 1,096 1,141 45 4
McCormick 542 551 9 2
Calhoun 931 933 2 0
Williamsburg 1,672 1,651 -21 -1
Allendale 497 473 -24 -5
Barnwell 1,405 1,358 -47 -3
Lee 859 808 -51 -6
Darlington 3,695 3,551 -144 -4
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Which counties contribute the most to the gig economy in South Carolina?

The top 5 counties have 44.57% of the entire 380,729 gig workforce

Looking at the county distribution for the gig economy workers across South Carolina, the top 5 counties have 44.57% of the entire 380,729 gig workforce.

On the other hand the lowest contributing locations contribute approximately 0.95% of the state level gig workforce with 3,612 gig workers in total among them.


As expected, the top counties with the most number of gig workers are also the counties with the highest growth percentage of gig workers over the last decade. The best growth achieved is by Greenville county, where the number of gig workers increased 32% from being 33,489 in 2016 to 44,368 in 2019 ( the latest reference year for NES as per the release on Jun 30 2022).


Growth in gig economy across all of the counties in South Carolina over the last decade

Who does gig work and what are the demographic profile of gig economy workers in South Carolina?

Across South Carolina, the number of male workers in gig economy stood at 191,000 compared to 158,000 female workers

Across South Carolina, the gig work runs through every demographic profile criteria. As some of the the gigs such as delivering packages, food, driving passengers have low entry barriers work has a low barrier to start with, a lot of younger and population that is not economically established tend to take up these gigs more than the rest of population.

To get more details, we analyzed the most current Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics. We found that across South Carolina, the number of male workers in gig economy stood at 191,000 compared to 158,000 female workers.


Demographic breakdown of gig economy workers, by gender, in South Carolina

The distribution on the basis of ethnicity was stark and the number of non hispanics in the gig workforce stood at 341,000 compared to 16,500 workers with ethnicity as hispanic.


Demographic breakdown of gig economy workers, by ethnicity, in South Carolina

On the basis of race the number of gig workers from the white population was found to be 277,000 compared to the 70,500 from black and 9,200 asian population.


Demographic breakdown of gig economy workers, by race, in South Carolina


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Neilsberg Research
Neilsberg Research team are data scientists with expertise in processing, analysis and visualization of big data helping small businesses make right decisions.

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