The Sharing Economy: Access Is The New Ownership www.informationweek.com /mobile/mobile-devices/the-sharing-economy-access-is-the-newownership/d/d-id/1319946 A report from PricewaterhouseCoopers predicts that revenue in five key sectors of the sharing economy could reach $335 billion by 2025.
New York Auto Show: Cool Cars With Hot Tech (Click image for larger view and slideshow.) Communism may have failed to establish collective property ownership, but it has evolved to meet capitalism halfway in the sharing economy. Thanks to the mobile revolution and a confluence of other factors -- 35 years of wage stagnation, entrepreneurs challenging ossified business models, the appeal of convenience, environmental concerns, and affinity for social interaction – access has become the new ownership, at least from a consumer perspective. Companies in the tech industry are most engaged with the sharing economy, and view it as both a near-term threat and an opportunity, said Matt Hobbs, software and Internet industry partner at PwC, in a phone interview. Among companies where sharing has not yet had an impact, he said, many are looking for ways to get out in front of the trend rather than waiting to find their business model disrupted. Businesses still deal with capitalist norms on a daily basis. Patents still exist; owners still extract rents. But collectively owned assets -- open source software and hardware designs, for example, and crowdsourced labor have transformed the competitive landscape. Simultaneously, companies must now figure out how to deal with a growing number of customers who would rather interact with one another than with a commercial vendor. Consider that Airbnb hosts as a group put up 425,000 guests every night, 22% more than Hilton Worldwide. PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has published a report that suggests the sharing economy will grow. According to the report, which is based on an online survey of 1,000 people, 19% of US adults have participated in a sharing economy transaction and 72% said they could see themselves being a consumer in the sharing economy in the next two years.