Some Notes on Sharing
Looking through my laptop, I found a couple of
saved documents intended for Lost Legacy but events intervened and I did not
post them. I have read them again and post one of them today because it remains
appropriate.
Some ideas in an Editorial in Financial Times 11
August 2013 HERE:
“Technology sponsors
a complementary form of capitalism”
“The foundation of modern economics is Adam
Smith’s observation that an individual who aims only for his gain may still be
led “by an invisible hand” to make choices that bring economic benefits to
others.”
Comment
Putting to one side
the obvious – Adam Smith used “an invisible hand” as a metaphor not as a stand
alone theory – what can we say about the Editorial’s “observations”?
Well, for a start,
as with so much of newspaper economics, it all depends on what happens next, in
the sense where is the editorial about to take us with its new, emerging “idea”?
FT: “Last week, the Financial Times
reported that a complementary view is emerging in the form of a ‘sharing
economy’.”
Comment
Really? Surely Adam Smith wrote in Wealth Of
Nations in 1776 that every individual is dependent on the cooperation of other
individuals, because “he stands at all
times in need of the co–operation and assistance of great multitudes, while his
whole life is scarce sufficient to gain the friendship of a few persons” (WN
I.ii.2.) This is hardly an “emerging view”, somehow new to economists today? It is still true.
The so-called “emerging
view has always existed and known to anybody familiar with Adam Smith’s Works,
and is only unrecognized by those limited in their above very narrow definition
of self-interest gleaned from some other sources.
FT: “Most productivity growth may
still be powered by self-interest. But modern information technology is helping
the invisible hand become a whole lot more collaborative.”
Comment
Again muddled
thinking about self-interest and collaboration.
There has been too
much breathless talk of how IT would revolutionise the economy, so it is useful
to distinguish changes that are truly transformational from those that merely
make it easier to do what one was already doing.
FT: “Three broad trends assert themselves.
First, the internet makes it much cheaper for
individuals to offer traditional goods and services to a larger market.”
Comment
Yes, but what has changed in a larger market is more anonymity
that has always existed in markets.
We don’t know people a few links along the supply chains.
FT: “Take
short-term accommodation: there have always been homeowners wanting to rent out
a spare room, and the hotel industry is of course of old vintage. IT does not
bring fundamental innovation in this case. But – as websites … show – making it
possible, for free, to connect with customers anywhere in the world cuts
transaction costs and shrinks the advantage of scale that hotel chains hold
over homey bed and breakfast operations.”
A lower cost structure is not itself a shift
from the pursuit of one’s self-interest to a passion for sharing. It is
nonetheless significant. When it becomes profitable to occupy rooms that would
previously have stayed empty, it is a boost to the efficient use of society’s
resources.
Comment:
But before IT, small adds in local shops and
local newspapers sufficed to “fill local rooms! I experienced this form of
finding accommodation as a student in Glasgow, Scotland and before that in
Sydney, Australia, in both cases, when somewhat penurious in funds, like tens
of thousands of others, every week. Hence, nothing fundamentally new here.
FT: “The same can be said for how
the internet has made more personal services affordable for those outside the
ranks of the super-rich. Those with more cash than time can outsource small
chores to those in the opposite situation. The vehicles are sites that match
tasks – from picking up the laundry to settling the utility bills – to those
with time to spare.
Second, the information revolution facilitates
genuine sharing in consumption. Barter – long seen as the height of
inefficiency – is enjoying a revival through house swaps, where the internet
can deepen the pool of swappers, making compatible pairings more likely.
Comment
I can recall many
instances of academics arranging with others abroad, house exchanges with
strangers during scholarly leave in other countries, by making such agreements
by correspondence with other departmens, hence the principle is not emerging and
has always been available.
FT: “Many city residents are ditching
car ownership in favour of web-facilitated car sharing. Car clubs
that allow down to half-hour car rentals exist in cities around the globe.“
Comment
Multiple uses of Taxis have always existed in cities.
For long distance we used informal “thumbing” a lift – always
free - but it had its personal safety risks. I hitched all over Western Europe
as a student without such problems.
FT: “In France,
buzzcar.com allows “peer-to-peer rental”: private car owners rent out their
vehicles when they do not need them. Sharing can be a lifestyle as well as an
economy.”
Comment
Sharing is not new:
markets have always existed on the basis of sharing in exchange behaviour. They could not work without sharing. We are dependent not alone in an hostile world.
FT: This underpins the third, most innovative and exciting trend: sharing
in production. The open-source movement in software coding, Wikipedia, and some
artists’ renunciation of standard copyright show how work that is carried out
voluntarily and co-ordinated spontaneously can result in economically valuable
products.
Comment
Yes, it is called the market! It promotes and promotes its purposes
through co-operation.
Recall Adam Smith on the supply chain involved in the Labourer’s common
woollen coat (WN I.i.11) and all the trades involved in it. Today’s products are produced by
immensely developed complex and lengthy supply chains well beyond the basic
woolen coat of 1776, but it’s the same principle.
FT: Like traditional capitalism, markets rely on trust and on supporting
institutions for their success. These can be provided by the market itself –
from the informal, such as user reviews, to the formal, such as Creative Commons licensing standards.
Comment
Correct.
But “capitalism” and the “market” are not
synonymous! Both require basic regulations and systems of justice. From the beginning markets were
regulated; in modern “capitalism”, political cronyism is rampant (in some
places it is corrupted and corrupting).
3 Comments:
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I let this comment through but my judgment was very marginal. Lost Legacy does not carry commercial posts, not least because I do not authorise the quality or reliability of whatever is offered.
READER ARE WARNED TO CHECK THE BONA FIDES OF THOSE BEHIND THIS COMMENT.
I HAVE NO WAY TO CHECK SYDNEY FROM SCOTLAND.
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