www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

The inexorable logic of sharing economy

By MICHAEL SPENCE (China Daily) Updated: 2015-10-09 07:23

The inexorable logic of sharing economy

A man uses taxi-hailing app on his smartphone on a road in Guangzhou city, South China's Guangdong province, April 9, 2015. [Photo/IC]

Amazon and eBay, following their establishment in 1994 and 1995, harnessed the connectivity of the Internet to create new, more efficient markets. In the beginning, that meant new ways of buying and selling books and collectibles; but now e-commerce is everywhere, offering customers new goods and used goods-and becoming a global force in logistics and retail. Likewise, while today's sharing-economy companies may be just out of their infancy, their services will one day be ubiquitous.

By now, most people have heard of Airbnb, the online apartment-rental service. The company has just 600 employees but a million properties listed for rent, making it larger than the world's biggest hotel chains. Of course, what Airbnb offers is different from what hotels provide; but if Airbnb offered options for, say, maid service or food, they could become closer competitors than one might initially imagine.

The Internet enables creative new business models that increase not only a market's efficiency but also the utilization of our various assets. Hundreds of experiments are being conducted. Clearly, not all of them will experience the astonishing growth of Airbnb and Uber. Some, like Rent the Runway for designer clothes and accessories, may find profitable niches; others will simply fail.

The digital platforms that act as the basis of all this e-commerce need to meet two related challenges. The first is to produce a network effect, so that buyers and sellers find one another often enough and rapidly enough to make a business sustainable. Second, the platform must create trust-in the product or the service-on both sides of the transaction.

Trust is crucial to the network effect; hence the need for two-way evaluation systems that encourage buyers and sellers to be repeat users of the relevant platform. Small players can then act in large markets, because-over time-they become known quantities. The power of these platforms derives from overcoming informational asymmetries, by dramatically increasing the signal density of the market.

Indeed, in order to encourage infrequent e-commerce users, innovators and investors are exploring ways to combine the evaluation databases of separate, even rival, platforms. Whatever the legal and technical issues that must be overcome, down the road we can surely imagine the kind of data consolidation already practiced internally by retail giants like Amazon or Alibaba.

Some sharing models-perhaps most-rely on both labor and other assets: for example, a person and his or her car, computer, sewing machine, or kitchen (for home-delivered meals). This throwback to the cottage industries that preceded modern production is possible today because the Internet is lowering the costs of dispersion that once compelled the concentration of work in factories and offices.

Perhaps inevitably, regulatory issues arise, as Uber is now discovering from California to Europe. Taxis and limousines are to some extent protected from competition because they need licenses to operate; they are also regulated for customer safety. But then Uber invades their market with a differentiated product, subject largely to its own regulations for vehicles and drivers. In the process, it threatens to lower the value of licenses just as surely as any official decision to issue new licenses would. No wonder the taxi drivers of Paris and other French cities-hitherto protected from competition-have protested so vehemently (and, on occasion, violently).

An intriguing question is how far the financial sector will embrace the sharing economy. Peer-to-peer lending and crowd-funding already represent new ways of matching borrowers with investors. Clearly, issues relating to liability and insurance will have to be addressed in all sharing-economy models, especially financial ones; but these are hardly insurmountable obstacles.

The truth is that the Internet-led process of exploiting under-utilized resources-be they physical and financial capital or human capital and talent-is both unstoppable and accelerating. The long-term benefits consist not just in efficiency and productivity gains (large enough to show up in macro data), but also in much-needed new jobs requiring a broad range of skills. Indeed, those who fear the job-destroying and job-shifting power of automation should look upon the sharing economy and breathe a bit of a sigh of relief.

The author, a winner of Nobel Prize in economics, is professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of Business and senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Project Syndicate

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美日韩精品一区二区视频在线观看 | 国产精品亚洲第一区二区三区 | 中文字幕亚洲精品久久 | 一区二区伦理 | 五月天婷婷伊人 | 成人自拍小视频 | 乱淫毛片 | 黄色免费在线观看视频 | 99精品久久秒播无毒不卡 | 日韩欧美毛片免费观看视频 | 国产精品 色 | 老少配性xxxxxx | 欧美精品免费线视频观看视频 | 中文字幕在线观看不卡视频 | 丝袜足液精子免费视频 | 热伊人99re久久精品最新地 | 国产高清在线精品一区二区三区 | 日韩欧美毛片免费看播放 | 亚洲欧美日韩在线线精品 | 亚洲一区二区三区四区在线 | 一级做a爰片性色毛片中国 一级做a爰性色毛片 | 亚洲精品一区二区不卡 | 日韩 亚洲 制服 欧美 综合 | 亚洲成人黄色网址 | 亚洲视频一区二区在线观看 | 亚洲成a人片在线v观看 | 久久无码精品一区二区三区 | 国产精品国产高清国产专区 | 奇米四色综合久久天天爱 | 久久香蕉国产线看观看亚洲片 | 色精品一区二区三区 | 久草a在线| 最新国产一区二区精品久久 | 亚洲精品在线观看视频 | 亚洲综合网在线观看首页 | 欧美在线观看一区 | 国产三级a三级三级午夜 | 国产精品女在线观看 | 草草免费观看视频在线 | 国产v视频 | 亚洲国产天堂久久综合网站 |