The sharing economy is disaster capitalism
Source: Medium
... For the past few years, the sharing economy has characterized itself as a revolution: Renting a room on Airbnb or catching an Uber is an act of civil disobedience in the service of a righteous return to human societys true nature of trust and village-building that will save the planet and our souls. A higher form of enlightened capitalism.
But this economy is still young and discovering itself. So far it looks, at worst, like neoliberal solutionism and at best, a little confused. This cognitive dissonance might be cute were it not backed by millions of dollars in capital investment and a steamroller approach to laws and regulations that protect workers and consumers.
... Across the U.S., high costs of living are driving more of the employed toward side hustles, i.e. unprotected freelance work, the kind fostered by the sharing economy. Where workers dont have the start-up investments necessary to participate the cars, homes, kitchens to rent then they can just rent those too. Lyfts new luxury service is aimed at encouraging non-car owners to drive for the company, giving them a lease option on impractical custom premium Ford Explorers.
The sharing economys success is inextricably tied to the economic recession, making new American poverty palatable. Its disaster capitalism. Sharing companies are not embarrassed by this it appears to be a point of pride.
Read more: https://medium.com/the-nib/the-case-against-sharing-9ea5ba3d216d