Ilovecheese
Some zero hours contracts forbid the worker from working for anyone else. Finding two part time jobs to fit in with each other is not easy.what is easy is to apportion blame without a proper understanding.
I didn't know employers could actually forbid you to work for another employer - but their contracts do sometimes make it very difficult to do so because of their demands. If you have to be available - at the drop of a hat, so to speak, you're not going to last very long with a company that expects you to be on stand-by, when you tell them that you're working elsewhere on the occasion that they want you.
The gig economy has its downsides and that's one of them.
I don't know this chap, but I know of him as he's the son of a friend... he's exactly in this position. He's trying to find another part-time job to supplement the first. It's been almost impossible. Pay is pretty poor, too, so he flits from one contract to another (that offers better pay). The worst aspect for him is, he said, that he can't budget properly.
With such little investment in the workforce, I wonder if the gig economy is good for long-term growth?