Never Mind the Sharing Economy: Here?s Platform Capitalism

1. A Backlash Against Sharing?
Lately, the so-called ?sharing economy? has been all over the news. Under 
flashy headlines such as ?Sharing is the New Owning? it is heralded as the 
solution to the current financial crisis, the path toward a more sustainable 
economy or even the harbinger of a post-capitalist society. And while the 
"sharing economy" is supposed to be all these wonderful things at once, it also 
generates such disruptive and fantastically profitable businesses  like AirBnB, 
Uber or TaskRabbit. No wonder then, that policy makers are getting increasingly 
excited about this ?force for good'. Just a few weeks ago, the British 
government announced its intention to ?make the UK the global centre for the 
sharing economy.? As Business and Enterprise minister Matthew Hancock rejoiced: 
?By backing the sharing economy? we?re making sure that Britain is at the 
forefront of progress and by future proofing our economy we?re helping to 
protect the next generation."

Yet, while policy makers and their advisers can hardly contain their 
enthusiasm, over the course of the last few months there has been a veritable 
surge of critical comments on the "sharing economy." Mainstream media as well 
as the blogosphere are brimming with furious articles, warning us to not buy 
into the ?sharing hype" or even attacking the supposed ?sharing lie.? The 
American business magazine Forbes even talks about a "backlash against the 
sharing economy."

After years of almost unequivocal enthusiasm for the innovative wonders of the 
"sharing economy," a real debate finally seems to be emerging. In this short 
essay, I am going to follow this debate while trying to find an answer to the 
question of what the "sharing economy" in fact is.

2. To Share or Not to Share
Not unlike other contemporary policy fashions such as the creative industries 
or social innovation, the "sharing economy" throws together a variety of 
diverse and often unrelated phenomena; from massively funded technology 
start-ups like Uber and AirBnB to fair trade cooperatives, borrowing shops and 
hippie communes. It would be wrong, however, to understand this confusion as a 
result of the intellectual incompetence on the side of trend watchers and 
innovation consultants. While it is true that the growing army of these 
professional would-be clairvoyants depends on the regular construction of the 
?next big thing? for their own economic survival - the vaguer, the better - the 
confusion that comes with the "sharing economy" is the intended result of a 
smart marketing strategy. But I am getting ahead of myself...

The first thing we need to understand about the "sharing economy" is that it 
has absolutely nothing to do with sharing in the sense you and I might think 
about it. The essence of sharing - if it has any meaning at all - is of course 
that it does not involve the exchange of money. Sharing only happens in the 
absence of market transactions. With regard to the poster boys and girls of the 
"sharing economy," the very opposite is the case. These are digital platforms 
that roughly do two things: either making the old practice of re- and 
multi-using durable goods more efficient or expanding market exchange into 
economically uncharted territory of society.

If we look at internet marketplaces such as Ebay, Etsy and their many 
variations, it is clear that what they offer are digitally modernized versions 
of the good old second hand shop. What?s new about them is that thanks to the 
internet, the supply of used goods (and in the case of Etsy, also handicraft) 
finds its demand much more effectively and efficiently than ever before. There 
can be no doubt that his leads to a more efficient (re-)use of durable goods, 
thus contributing to a more sustainable allocation of resources. The same 
applies to rentals, particularly cars or bikes but also to lots of other goods. 
Thanks to the internet and mobile digital technology, the centralized 
stockpiling of goods to be rented has become unnecessary which, again, saves 
resources. Their dispersion is not a problem any more but often rather adds to 
the convince of the rental process - think of a car that you can pick up around 
the corner rather than having to travel to the nearest agent. However, none 
 of this has anything to do with sharing! Matthew Yglesias, writing for the US 
business blog Slate.com, illustrates this fact as follows:

?My neighbor and I share a snow shovel because we share some stairs that need 
to be shovelled when it snows and we share responsibility for doing the work. 
If I owned the stairs and charged him a small fee every time he walked in or 
out of the house, that would be the opposite of sharing.?

This might sound trivial but given the confused usage of the notion of sharing, 
it seems appropriate to remind ourselves that helping each other out by sharing 
our resources is one thing while commodifying these resources by charging a fee 
for their use is quite another. And this gets us to the more innovative 
dimension of the "sharing economy." Today, the "sharing economy" entails much 
more than just digital updates of second-hand exchange and rentals. What 
companies like Uber, AirBnB, TaskRabbit or Postmates have in common is that 
they are platforms coordinating supply and demand of products and services that 
in their present form were previously unavailable on the market. Uber is a 
platform where people looking for a cab quickly find their non-, semi-, and 
real professional taxi driver. AirBnB allows people to sublet their houses, 
TaskRabbit connects supply and demand for chores,  Postmates for deliveries, 
Instacart for grocery shopping. While it might be convenient to make use of
  these services, they have absolutely nothing to do with sharing. They stand 
for a digitally enabled expansion of the market economy, which, again, is the 
opposite of sharing. If someone does my shopping or drops me at the airport in 
exchange for a financial fee, how is this sharing? This situation doesn?t 
change if instead of money, one receives credits to be used at the issuing 
platform (a mistake that for the last few years has led to a rather annoying 
hype around ?alternative currencies? based on the belief that the ?evils? of 
capitalism could be cured by replacing real money by a less efficient 
substitute).

3. Enter Platform Capitalism
In an attempt to overcome this confusion, Sascha Lobo, a German technology 
blogger for Der Spiegel, has recently suggested to drop the obscure notion of 
?sharing? altogether. "What is called sharing economy,? he argues, ?is merely 
one aspect of a more general development, i.e., a new quality of the the 
digital economy: platform capitalism.? As Lobo emphasizes, platforms like Uber 
and AirBnB are more than just internet marketplaces. While marketplaces connect 
supply and demand between customers and companies, digital platforms connect 
customers to whatever. The platform is a generic ?ecosystem? able to link 
potential customers to anything and anyone, from private individuals to 
multinational corporations. Everyone can become a supplier for all sorts of 
products and services at the click of a button. This is the real innovation 
that companies of the platform capitalism variety have introduced. Again, this 
is miles away from sharing but instead represents an interesting mutation of 
the 
 economic system due to the application of digital technology.

It should be clear that understanding the "sharing economy" in terms of 
platform capitalism is by no means a matter of linguistic nitpicking. Calling 
this crucial development by its proper name is an important step towards a more 
sober assessment of the claims made by the proponents of ?sharing.? Take, for 
instance, the notion that everyone benefits from the disruptive force of the 
"sharing economy" because it cuts out the middleman. Sharing models, the 
argument goes, facilitate a more direct exchange between economic agents, thus 
eliminating the inefficient middle layers and making market exchange simpler 
and fairer. While it is absolutely true that internet marketplaces and digital 
platforms can reduce transaction costs, the claim that they cut out the 
middleman is pure fantasy. As one blogger puts it: ?Sure, many of the old 
middlemen and retailers disappear but only to be replaced by much more powerful 
gatekeepers.?

In fact, the argument is quite an obscene one, particularly if it is made by 
the stakeholders of platform capitalism themselves. As globally operating 
digital platforms, these companies have the unique ability to cut across many 
regional markets and reconfigure traditionally specific markets for goods and 
services as generic customer-to-whatever ?ecosystems?. It seems fairly obvious 
that the entire purpose of the platform business model is to reach a monopoly 
position, as this enables the respective platform to set and control the 
(considerably lower) standards upon which someone (preferably anyone) could 
become a supplier in the respective market. Instead of cutting out the 
middleman, digital platforms have the inherent tendency to become veritable 
?ber-middlemen, i.e., monopolies with an unprecedented control over the markets 
they themselves create. In fact, calling these customer-to-whatever ecosystems 
?markets? often turns out to be a bit of a joke. For the clients of Uber & Co.,
  price is not the result of the free play of supply and demand but of specific 
algorithms supposedly simulating the market mechanism. The effect of such 
algorithmic tampering with the market is demonstrated for instance by Uber?s 
surge pricing during periods of peak demand. It is not very difficult to see 
where this might be leading. Taking a cab to the hospital in, say, New York 
City during a snow storm might become unaffordable for some under conditions of 
mature platform capitalism. For those who believe this to be overly pessimistic 
and a bit of an exaggeration, just ask your local taxi driver what percentage 
of her work is already coming from one of the digital platforms.

4. Disruption and Regulation
This is not meant as an excuse to engage in the increasingly popular pastime of 
algorithm bashing. There is neither an algorithmic conspiracy here, nor are 
these companies selling out the ?true spirit of the sharing economy?. They 
simply follow the logic of platform capitalism which at the moment is the logic 
of a digital gold rush, unhampered by any kind of government regulation. In a 
way, what we are seeing here is social innovation in its purest form, i.e., the 
creation of something that from a business perspective is even better than the 
so-called ?blue ocean? (a competition-free market). And it is causing the 
famous disruption - so much so that cities like Amsterdam are raising the white 
flag as entire streets are turning into exclusive AirBnB zones. It should be 
clear that this doesn?t help an already overstrained housing market, let alone 
the local population?s quality of life. While taxi drivers' protests against 
Uber and Lyft have been be laughed away as collateral innovatio
 n damage, the transformation of our cities into tax-free, urban versions of 
?Center Parcs? might be more difficult to stomach.

At the moment, platform capitalism is allowed to run wild because it is simply 
running too fast for politicians and regulators. Nothing expresses the 
political impotence in the face of this new kind of digital capitalism better 
than the painfully ignorant techno-gibberish frequently emitted by Neelie 
Kroes, outgoing EU-Commissioner for Digital Development. There are, however, 
also signs of a turning tide such as the recent exchange between Goolge?s Eric 
Schmidt and the German Minister of Economic Affairs, Sigmar Gabriel in which 
the latter responded to the former?s assertion that ?all we do is follow the 
law? by saying: ?I understand this as a request for regulation.? The question 
is, of course, whether this will to regulate is going to persist against the 
enormous lobbying power of platform capitalism.

Regulation is important not only in order to prevent monopolies, fund the state 
and keep our cities liveable for their actual inhabitants but also to insure 
fair treatment of those we haven?t considered yet: the suppliers and vendors 
who sell their products and services on the digital platforms. If we are to 
believe the proponents of the "sharing economy," then the opportunities are 
pretty amazing. As Brian Chesky, CEO and co-founder of Airbnb, puts it in Wall 
Street Journal:

"I want to live in a world where people can become entrepreneurs or 
micro-entrepreneurs and if we can lower the friction and inspire them to do 
that, especially in an economy like today, this is the promise of the sharing 
economy."

According to Chesky, digital platforms are simply a reflection of our 
contemporary entrepreneurial lifestyle and anyway, they provide people with an 
extra opportunity for income in these times of economic crisis. Similarly, New 
York Magazine sees the "sharing economy" as an answer to our current economic 
predicament as well but is slightly less euphoric as to the potency of the 
sharing antidote:

?Tools that help people trust in the kindness of strangers might be the thing 
pushing hesitant sharing-economy participants over the threshold to adoption. 
But what's getting them to the threshold in the first place is a damaged 
economy, and harmful public policy that has forced millions of people to look 
to odd jobs for sustenance.?

So which one is it then: inspired micro-entrepreneurs or odd jobs for 
sustenance?

5. Revolutionizing the World?s Labour Force
At the moment, it is still difficult to reach a fair conclusion on this 
question as the reports from the field are only starting to come in. Their is a 
fairly clear tendency though. Business magazine Fast Company, a publication 
known for its enthusiasm for everything innovative and digital, sent one of its 
writers for one month into the ?sharing economy? to test the waters of 
entrepreneurial inspiration. The conclusion of her very interesting and 
extensive report is rather devastating:

?For one month, I became the ?micro-entrepreneur? touted by companies like 
TaskRabbit, Postmates, and Airbnb. Instead of the labor revolution I had been 
promised, all I found was hard work, low pay, and a system that puts workers at 
a disadvantage.?

In fact, Sarah Kessler (that?s the name of the writer turned sharing Guinea 
pig) never made enough to get by at all despite being young, flexible and 
urban, i.e., part of the social cohort that is supposed to fare particularly 
well in the ?sharing economy.? Similar concerns have been raised by the New 
York Times? rather comprehensive journalistic analysis of the phenomenon. Yes, 
there is freedom to be found in platform capitalism but it is the precarious 
freedom of what the newspaper calls the ?gig economy:?

?Many gigs may seem to offer decent pay. But they may not look that great after 
factoring in the time spent, expenses, insurance costs and taxes on 
self-employment earnings. ?If you did the calculations, many of these people 
would be earning less than minimum wage,? says Dean Baker, an economist who is 
the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. 
?You are getting people to self-exploit in ways we have regulations in place to 
prevent.??

If one adds protesting Uber drivers and the fact that on top of miserable pay 
and lack of safety net one also misses the the social (!) aspect of sharing 
one?s work experience with coworkers, there isn?t really much awesomeness left 
for the sharing micro-entrepreneur. TaskRabbit?s CEO Leah Busque once said that 
the goal of her company was to "revolutionize the world's labor force.? 
Unfortunately, it looks as though Mrs. Busque and her investors could 
accomplish what they set out to do. One might not agree with CUNY Professor 
Stanley Aronowitz, who refers to the ?gigs? offered the by ?sharing economy? as 
?wage slavery in which all the cards are held, mediated by technology, by the 
employer, whether it is the intermediary company or the customer.? What does 
become increasingly obvious, though, is that platform capitalism is mounting an 
attack on the achievements of the labour movement - which for very good reasons 
we consider to be a pillar of modern, democratic civilization - and a ve
 ry effective one at that. And here again, it is not that the "sharing economy" 
has gone off the the rails, it is simply the logic of platform capitalism. As 
Sacha Lobo puts it succinctly:

?By controlling their ecosystems, platforms create a stage on which every 
economic transaction can be turned into an auction. Nothing minimizes cost 
better than an auction - including the cost of labour. That?s why labour is the 
crucial societal aspect of platform capitalism. It is exactly here that we will 
have to decide whether to harness the enormous advantages of platform 
capitalism and the sharing economy or to create a ?dumping market? where the 
exploited amateurs only have the function to push professional prices down.?

I agree. The basis for such a decision needs to be a proper understanding of 
the reality of platform capitalism. The anger we have seen over the last few 
months directed against the ?sharing economy? has a lot to do with the utterly 
unsubstantial claims and stories that are constantly churned out by the 
marketing machine of platform capitalism. Take John Zimmer, co-founder of Lyft, 
who told Wired earlier this year that the sharing economy bestows on us the 
gift of a revived community spirit. Referring to his visit to the Oglala Sioux 
reservation, he writes: ?Their sense of community, of connection to each other 
and to their land, made me feel more happy and alive than I?ve ever felt. We 
now have the opportunity to use technology to help us get there.? No question, 
the pompous impertinence of this comparison is truly breathtaking. And yet, 
neither is this kind of rhetorical gymnastics the exception in the 
sharing-scene nor does it come unmotivated. Noam Scheiber of the New Republic ex
 plains the rationale behind the obscenities of Zimmer (and his kind) with 
great lucidity :

"For-profit ?sharing? represents by far the fastest-growing source of un- and 
under-regulated commercial activity in the country. Calling it the modern 
equivalent of an ancient tribal custom is a rather ingenious rationale for 
keeping it that way. After all, if you?re a regulator, it?s easy to crack down 
on the commercial use of improperly zoned and insured property. But what kind 
of knuckle-dragger would crack down on making friends?"

6. The Sharing Economy: A Dumb Term that Deserves to Die!
The truth of the matter, though, as Nathan Schneider writes on Al-Jazeera 
America, is that ?the sharing sector of the conventional economy built on 
venture capital and exploited labor is a multibillion dollar business, while 
the idea of a real sharing economy based on cooperatives, worker solidarity and 
democratic governance remains too much of an afterthought. If the sharing 
movement really wants to disrupt economic injustice, these should be its first 
priorities.?

I hope that it has become clear over the course of this little essay that it is 
in no way the intention of the "sharing economy" to ?disrupt economic 
injustice.? The "sharing economy" does not exist. Or, in the words of the 
business writer Matthew Yglesias: ?This is a dumb term, and it deserves to 
die." One of the reasons why it doesn't is that Silicon Valley?s powerful 
marketing machine that drives platform capitalism is beautifully adjusted to a 
global network of willing volunteers; from the one size fits all TED format to 
more thematically specific publications and conferences. Even well-meaning 
activist networks such as Shareable or the P2P-Foundation play a rather 
questionable role in keeping the myth of the "sharing-economy" alive.

This is not to say that there are no great initiatives and indeed businesses 
that are trying to use the power of digital technology or simply their 
imagination to practice forms of exchange that could actually be called 
sharing. They do exist and it is wonderful that they do. However, their value 
in the ?sharing economy? as it is currently staged by the stakeholders of 
platform capitalism is that of providing an illegitimate ethical charge, a fig 
leave for an alarming mutation of our economy. I think they deserve better! 
Yet, in order to even have a chance at turning this development into something 
that might be legitimately called ?sharing economy,? we need to be absolutely 
clear about the fact that platform capitalism does not even remotely resemble 
it.



networkcultures.org/mycreativity/2014/10/16/never-mind-the-sharing-economy-heres-platform-capitalism/
 

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