Delhi’s bustling streets have long been the domain of the neighbourhood kirana wallah, the cycle-rickshaw puller, and the ubiquitous delivery man. But a new breed of worker has quietly emerged, carrying not parcels, but the very weight of an ancient city’s modernisation. They are the shopping bag carriers, a gig-economy service that promises to free Delhiites from the drudgery of lugging their own purchases. Yet beneath the convenience lies a tangle of ethics, dignity, and the relentless march of algorithmic capitalism.
The concept is simple: a smartphone app connects shoppers with carriers who will tail them through markets, haul their bags, and deliver them to their door. Think of it as a human-powered Amazon delivery, but for the physical act of shopping itself. The service has found surprising traction in South Delhi’s upscale malls and old haunts like Chandni Chowk, where narrow lanes make vehicular access a nightmare. For many, it is a godsend. No more aching shoulders or crowded buses. No more negotiation with auto-rickshaws over a surcharge for luggage.
But the optics are troubling. Critics argue the service commodifies labour in a way that feels uncomfortably servile. It evokes a bygone era of attendants, bearers, and porters, now repackaged for the digital age under the thin veneer of “gig work”. The carriers themselves are mostly migrants from rural Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, lured by the promise of flexible work and a share of the market. Yet their pay is meagre, often below minimum wage, and they shoulder the full burden of physical risk without any of the protections of formal employment.
“It’s not about technology, it’s about power,” says Dr. Ananya Sharma, a labour economist at the Centre for Policy Research. “The platform positions itself as a neutral intermediary, but it captures the value created by the carrier’s labour while offloading all the risk. The user gets convenience; the company gets a cut; the worker gets pennies and a sore back.”
Meanwhile, the industry’s boosters talk of empowerment. “We are creating livelihoods,” says Vikram Mehta, CEO of CarryCab, one of the leading services. “Our carriers tell us they appreciate the flexibility. They can work when they want, take breaks, and earn a fair day’s pay. It’s better than being stuck in a factory or a field.” The company provides uniforms, branded bags, and training in customer service. Some carriers even see the job as a stepping stone to better things. “I am learning English and how to use a smartphone,” says Raju, a young man from Lakhimpur Kheri who now works the main bazaar in Khan Market. “One day, I want to be a manager.”
But is that enough? The debate echoes larger questions about the gig economy in India, where platforms like Ola, Zomato, and Swiggy have turned a vast informal workforce into a digital army of contract workers. The shopping bag carriers are the latest, most visible example of a broader trend toward the “uberisation” of service work. They walk the line between convenience and exploitation, between innovation and indignity.
There is also the matter of surveillance. The app tracks the carrier’s location, speed, and performance. Algorithms assign jobs and set rates. There is no bargaining, no human negotiation. The platform, like many others, is a black box of code and data, opaque to those who depend on it for their daily bread. For the user, the experience is frictionless: a few taps and the problem of physical labour is outsourced to a faceless worker. The very invisibility of that labour is what makes the system so efficient and so troubling.
What then is the future? Will Delhi embrace its new legion of human logistics? Or will the backlash force a rethinking of the model? For now, the carriers continue to walk the city’s hot, dusty streets, bearing the guilt of a society that wants its convenience without its conscience. Technology did not invent inequality, but it is an expert at making it seamless. And as the shopping bag carriers pass through the crowds, one bag at a time, they carry more than just goods. They carry the weight of our choices.









