> If a driver wants to offer their services for more or less than uber decides, they cannot, and are forced to lower or raise their price in order to gain access to the market.
The drivers can ask for any price they want from Uber. Uber can either accept it or not. That’s a negotiation. What more do you think it needs to be a negotiation? That’s just like a normal contract. I may want my fence painted but I’m not paying over £500. If I won’t go below that is it no longer contracting?
Uber drivers don't have the option to set their rates. They cannot "ask for any price they want from Uber", they agree to accept the rates explicitly set by Uber: that's the contract; not every employment contract meets the legal definition of "contract employment"
> they agree to accept the rates explicitly set by Uber
Like any contractor!
If I offer to pay $500 for get my fence painted, a contractor can either accept that or not.
If you want to hire a web developer for $500 a day, a contractor can either accept that or not.
The fence painter, the web developer and the Uber driver, can all set their own rates by either accepting the job or not, can't they? I don't understand what you think is the difference between the first two and the last one?
The drivers can ask for any price they want from Uber. Uber can either accept it or not. That’s a negotiation. What more do you think it needs to be a negotiation? That’s just like a normal contract. I may want my fence painted but I’m not paying over £500. If I won’t go below that is it no longer contracting?