I am just starting up a new research
project focussing on the sharing economy in the UK, building on my ongoing
research on grassroots innovation in collaborative consumption. One of things has that really caught my
interest is the challenge of defining the core terminology (e.g. the sharing
economy, the collaborative economy, and collaborative consumption) and how these
different terms might fit together. Rather than offer yet another definition or
set of definitions, I would like to briefly reflect upon the challenges of constructing
a definition of the sharing economy. Having explored a range of definitions
offered by both academics and sharing economy advocates I tend to agree with
Juliet Schor (2014) that “Coming up with a solid
definition of the sharing economy that reflects common usage is nearly
impossible”. So why might this be the case?
Well when we talk about the
sharing economy we seek to define a multi-faceted (i.e. multi-dimensional)
space of social, economic and technological activity. Furthermore, these
dimensions are interrelated and are collectively or individually open to
critique or contestation from different political stances.
Starting with perhaps the central
dimension of the sharing economy – what forms of exchange are considered to be
acts of sharing? One might consider sharing by its common sense meaning to
exclude forms of exchange where a monetary benefit accrues to one or more
party. Or alternatively one might consider monetary benefit to be irrelevant as
it is access to an asset which is being shared. There is certainly an incentive
to adopt the latter position as entrepreneur or advocate with commercial
interests in the sharing economy, due to the positive associations potential
customers may have with the term sharing. However, using the term sharing in
this way is certainly open to critique as a form of share-washing. For example,
those less sympathetic to the logics of the market economy might argue that
renting isn’t sharing, it is obviously renting and that fact should not be obscured.
Moving on to considering a second
dimension – what things might be shared within the sharing economy? The things
being shared might be framed in many different ways including assets, products,
services, skills, time, human resources, physical resources, networks or access.
Some of these framing are certainly more contentious than others, although most
are open to the critique of adopting a rather dehumanising managerial or
technological perspective. In particular the avlues of enabling shared access
to a person’s professional skills and time by multiple employers (e.g. as
offered by Task Rabbit) has the potential to divide opinion. Whilst from a
market perspective such innovation can be lauded as economically empowering the
individual by providing create opportunities for employment, from a socialist
perspective it can be easily critiqued as eroding workers rights and
casualising the labour market.
In the table below I highlight 16
dimensions of the sharing economy each of which open up further potential for
contestation and critique. To me this emphasises the extent to which the
dynamics of politics and power pervade the sharing economy, and hence the
political nature of seeking to define and place boundaries on the sharing
economy.
This exploration of the
challenges of defining the sharing economy have left me with the feeling that
there is mileage in developing more explicitly normative definitions of the
sharing economy – i.e. definitions that outlining a vision for what we want the
sharing economy to become. Such definitions would of course be contested, but I
believe might further open up the possibilities for acknowledging and
understanding the politics at the heart of the sharing economy.
Some dimensions
of the sharing economy
|
Some
options for each dimension when creating a definition of the sharing economy
|
The actors do the sharing
|
Individual, consumer, citizen, organisation, cities,
countries
|
The framing of empowerment in the sharing economy
|
The economic consumer, the digitally connected
citizen, the individual
|
The framing of the things being ‘shared’
|
Resources, assets, products, services, skills,
time, human resources, physical resources, networks, access
|
The forms of exchange considered to be ‘sharing’
|
Giving, renting, swapping, bartering, sharing ...
|
The role of digital technology in ‘sharing’
|
Central, definitional (if it isn’t online it
isn’t the sharing economy), mediating, enabling, optional
|
The role of money in ‘sharing’
|
Necessary, optional, unacceptable
|
The scope of the sharing economy
|
A business model, a socio-economic system, a
social movement, consumption, production
|
The Drivers of the sharing economy
|
Underutilised assets, disruptive technologies,
waste, environmental concerns, hyper-consumption, the profit motive
|
The Purpose of the defining the sharing economy
|
Descriptive, normative
|
The Goals of the sharing economy
|
Efficiency, digital connectivity, sustainability
transitions, economic opportunity, fulfilling consumer needs and desires
|
The Relationship between the sharing economy and traditional/offline/established forms of
sharing
|
Taking established practices online and scaling
up, alternative means of enacting established practices of sharing
|
The core values of the sharing economy
|
Efficiency, openness, trust, autonomy, economic
liberty
|
The form of innovation taken by the sharing
economy
|
Technological, social, open
|
The institutional logics enacted by the sharing
economy
|
Capitalist, socialist, internet, peer-to-peer,
digital society, the network, social enterprise, the triple bottom line
|
The thing being transforming or disrupting by the
sharing economy
|
Business models, sharing practices, ownership
practices, consumption practices, production practices
|
The potential impact of the sharing economy
|
Disruptive, transformative, human development
|
Reference
Schor, J. 2014.
Debating the Sharing Economy. Available: http://greattransition.org/publication/debating-the-sharing-economy [Accessed 19th January 2015].
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