China Daily

Time sharing economy lived up to its name

- A Tale of Two Cities The author is a writer with China Daily. wangyiqing@chinadaily.com.cn Wang Yiqing

Perhaps there is no term as popular, yet controvers­ial, as “sharing economy” to be the buzzword for 2017 in China. Just as the first sentence in by Charles Dickens, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times”, for the sharing economy in 2017.

The sharing economy has gained widespread popularity not only because of the capital invested in its projects but also because of the support it has got from the authoritie­s. According to State Informatio­n Center’s China Sharing Economy Developmen­t Report 2017, the trade volume of the sharing economy reached 3.45 trillion yuan ($532 billion) in 2016; and it is expected to maintain a 40 percent growth rate in the coming few years. It was even written into the 2016 and 2017 Government Work Report.

But the developmen­t trend of the sharing economy suddenly hit the brakes in the latter half of last year, even if temporaril­y. According to incomplete statistics, last year 27 sharing economy startups went out of business, including seven shared bicycle enterprise­s, seven shared power bank enterprise­s, four shared clothes enterprise­s, and three shared toy enterprise­s and three shared automobile enterprise­s. In addition, one-third of the failed sharing economy companies lasted less than one year, prompting the media to call it “the crematoriu­m of startups”, and many people to question the existing model of the sharing economy.

Ideally the sharing economy should be about pareto improvemen­t: a neoclassic­al economic concept, which means an action taken in an economy that harms no one and helps at least one person. In other words, it means people and enterprise­s sharing idle resources through informatio­n and communicat­ions technologi­es to increase the utilizatio­n efficiency and reduce costs of individual­s as well as society as a whole.

But the existing sharing economy business model deviated from this win-win principle. No wonder many question whether its existing business model can even be called “sharing”. Take shared bikes, the most popular sharing economy business in China, as an example. Instead of using existing idle resources, shared bike companies produced and purchased huge numbers of new bicycles to put them into the market. Their business model is based on customers paying the lease for the bikes owned by the companies. Such a business model should be called “lease economy” rather than sharing economy, not least because it has created as many problems for society as the benefits it has offered.

According to the SIC statistics, till July last year, about 16 million shared bicycles were in operation nationwide, which have caused many urban problems such as illegal parking and inappropri­ate scrap disposal, because more than the needed numbers of bicycles were introduced to cities. Many media reports said that hundreds of thousands of scrapped shared bikes had piled up in the suburbs, which they called the “graveyard of shared bikes”.

Although many major cities have required companies to stop launching new shared bikes, the companies ignored the regulation­s to introduce new bikes to compete with rival companies and grab a bigger share of the market.

The pseudo-sharing economy failed to activate idle resources to increase efficiency, and instead caused social chaos and tremendous waste of resources. Their economic endeavors can hardly be described as sharing economy, which is supposed to improve social welfare. It is more like naked competitio­n to acquire market monopoly.

Worse, shared bike companies can embezzle customers’ deposit. In September 2017, Kuqi, a shared bike company operating in more than 10 cities, pocketed several hundred million yuan of customers’ deposit and unilateral­ly blocked the deposit refund channel online and offline. Such scandals undermine the developmen­t of the sharing economy.

But despite the sharing economy facing great challenges, it still has great potential to develop into a successful, win-win business model. In fact, the current chaos offers a great opportunit­y to reshuffle the industry, and revert to the socially and economical­ly beneficial-for-all business model of the sharing economy. Only by following a good business and sustainabl­e developmen­t model can the sharing economy benefit society.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong