New Report: Sharing Economy Must be Shaped by City Governments to Deliver Public Benefits
As the sharing economy explodes in growth, with new startups emerging regularly, many city officials are left scratching their heads wondering how to deal with this industry. From Uber and Airbnb, which have become what Shareable co-founder Neal Gorenflo describes as “death star platforms,” to local sharing projects, much of the sharing economy remains in grey areas.
Local governments are faced with what a new report calls a “tsunami of Sharing Economy activities” that has many of them overwhelmed and ill-equipped to develop an effective response. Local Governments and the Sharing Economy is a “roadmap helping local governments across North America strategically engage with the sharing economy to foster more sustainable cities.” The report explores the question: How can cities strategically engage with the sharing economy to advance sustainability? It offers three key messages:
- The Sharing Economy is not inherently sustainable but cities can help to make it more so.
- Community sharing (timebanks, lending libraries, repair cafes, etc.) is a promising area where local governments can play proactive, enabling roles.
- Addressing data gaps is critical for understanding sustainability impacts on cities.
The report is designed to provide tools to help local governments address pressing challenges and to “get ahead of the curve and harness the Sharing Economy to advance sustainability.” Developed and written by One Earth, a Vancouver-based non-profit organization focused on shifting to sustainable consumption and production across scales, with a grant from The J. W. McConnell Family Foundation as part of the Cities for People initiative, the report is lead authored by Rosemary Cooper and Vanessa Timmer. Shareable’s Neal Gorenflo served as an official adviser to the project.
The authors argue that, while there are grassroots movements, including Shareable’s Sharing City Network, and city networks, including the National League of Cities, the roadmap’s focus on the intersection of the sharing economy, sustainability, and local government is unique — particularly its focus on sustainability.
The roadmap outlines four main tools to help local governments:
- Defining the Sharing Economy: The roadmap analyzes different definitions of the sharing economy and provides one tailored to local government.
- Sustainability Filter and Sharing Economy Analysis Picture: The roadmap describes a sustainability filter with six questions to help local governments prioritize involvement in the Sharing Economy, which is then used to analyze, in depth: shared mobility, shared spaces, shared goods, and community sharing. And to a lighter degree: shared food, and shared energy. Sustainability impacts and recommendations for local governments are summarized.
- Strategic Opportunities for Local Governments: The roadmap describes key strategic ways that local governments can enable the sharing economy to advance sustainable cities given limited resources. Examples include: enable community sharing; address data gaps; focus and align; lead by example; commit to equity; and develop systematic and integrated approaches over time.
- Sharing Economy Resources: The roadmap provides a list of sharing economy experts and networks and recommended reading and a sample of local government materials including ordinances and bylaws.
The Local Governments and the Sharing Economy report also looks at city cases from across North America to explore challenges, successes, and best practices. Case studies include the following:
- Portland, Oregon — The City of Portland and Short-Term Rentals
- Seoul, Korea — Seoul’s Sharing City Initiative
- Toronto, Ontario — Partners in Project Green: Materials Exchange Network
- Austin, Texas — City of Austin and Short-Term Rentals
- Hennepin County, MN — Coordinating Fix-It Clinics
- Montreal, Quebec — Transport Cocktail: An Integrated Mobility System
The authors explain that the report does not celebrate the sharing economy without looking at its downsides and challenges; it does not analyze all sharing economy sectors and areas in detail; it does not provide advice for other actors beyond local governments in North America; and it does not suggest exactly what cities should do — each city’s choices are based on its unique priorities, interests and resources.
Download the 36 page summary of the report, or the 216 page, full Local Governments and the Sharing Economy report.
On Tuesday, November 24 at 10am PST / 1pm EST, the lead authors are hosting a free, one hour webinar to discuss the roadmap highlights. RSVP through Eventbrite.
Photo: Diego Torres Silvestre (CC-BY). Follow @CatJohnson on Twitter
Originally published at www.shareable.net.
Surely we should shape the city authorities to deliver what we want?
We should look to Frome, Flatpack Democracy, ordinary citizens seizing control of their local Town hall, opening meetings to public participation.
Yanis Varoufakis at public meetings, has empathised that we have trillions of dollars of idle money, which should be redirected to investment in green infrastructure, to creating a sharing economy.
Wherever I go, whoever I talk to, the mood has changed, a desire for something different.
In a patisserie Leicester square, a guy had a copy of PostCapitalism on his table. A lady in a coffee shop Covent Garden, same interest.
Meetings at very large venues (Methodist Central Hall, St Paul’s, Royal Festival hall) with Paul Mason, Yanis Varoufakis, have been oversubscribed.
The support seen, packed meetings, for Jeremy Corbyn and Bernie Sanders.
The exception in Athens, where hope has turned to despair, but even here, people desire change, at rock bottom, it can only improve.
Uber and Airbnb are NOT the sharing economy. They are exploitation, serfs working for death star apps.
Open co-ops, as proposed by Michel Bauwens, within a framework of contributing to the sharing, collaborative commons, are inherently sustainable, or a better way of looking at it, contribute to a steady-state economy.