Among the various reasons in the KIC survey, one figure draws attention: 14% of respondents said a side hustle helps them reduce stress.
At first glance, this finding sounds contradictory. Extra work is usually associated with an extra burden. But a particular psychological framework can help explain it.
In mental health literature, the term peniaphobia is used to describe an intense and persistent financial anxiety. This fear of poverty is not always proportional to a person's actual financial condition. The term comes from Greek, namely penia, meaning poverty, and phobos, meaning fear. Although it is not yet formally listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) or the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), psychologists acknowledge that the experience behind it is real.
According to the mental health platform Amaha, peniaphobia is often rooted not in poor financial conditions but in the belief that financial failure equals personal failure. Those who have worked hard to build stability after a difficult starting point are often more vulnerable to this feeling, precisely because they fear slipping back.
Various reports also show that psychologists see this phenomenon strengthening among young people who grew up through the 2008 global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic. Both events demonstrated firsthand that stability can disappear in a short time.
In this context, a side hustle has a psychological function distinct from its economic one. When all income depends on a single source, every sign of instability in the main job can feel like a threat to one's entire life. Mass layoffs at other companies, news of downsizing, or a poor performance review can immediately trigger anxiety. Conversely, having a second source of income changes that calculation. When one source wavers, the situation does not automatically turn into a total crisis.
That is why the KIC finding makes sense. Those 14% of respondents are not simply seeking more money for more consumption. They are seeking a sense of security.