1. Introduction
The organized variant of shared consumption is increasingly becoming prominent in future urban imageries, gaining traction in both research and policy-making fields. Based on experiences from the collaborative computing movement in the late 1990s, this “sharing turn” in the economy, whereby a number of digital applications have been introduced, has facilitated various forms of sharing, lending, bartering, or co-production [
1,
2]. New forms of collaborative consumption have emerged across different markets and in different forms. Evidences highlight that collaborative consumption holds potential to promote sustainable resource consumption and improve resource allocation [
3,
4]. In the field of transportation, digital infrastructure, mobile applications, and new business models have paved way for various de-privatized transport services, and car sharing holds a prominent place in this landscape. It is increasingly being seen as an emerging technological niche that can propel a shift towards more sustainable transport system [
5,
6,
7].
While informal car sharing has been around as long as private cars ownership, formal car sharing is based on membership in an organization or web-platform where cars can be rented and operated on a self-access basis for short- and medium-term use [
8]. It is rooted in the ethos that rather than owning a private car, need for car-based services can be met through membership of an organized platform, underlining a type of access-based consumption where consumers pay for using a vehicle instead of owning one (In this paper we use the term “car sharers” to refer to the individual users of a car sharing platforms, while “car sharing providers” is used for the enterprises promoting the services. For the P2P form, we have also used “peer-provider” and “consumer” for the partner involved in the transaction) [
9]. Although it does not represent a radically new technology, car sharing challenges the foundations of the car-based mobility system which has been and is still dominated by private ownership [
10,
11].
In the early stages of car sharing in the Nordic countries, the system was often based on local initiatives. NGOs, local communities, or Cooperatives invested in a pool of cars that the members could use whenever needed. In Norway, as in most other Scandinavian countries, these initiatives often had an idealistic motivation to curb use of private cars by making it easier to live without buying one [
8,
12,
13]. The largest cooperative car sharing system in Norway, “Bilkollektivet”, has roots in the green movement, where car sharing was considered a way to sustainably develop cities and improve their ecological footprint and social belongingness.
Over the last decade, this type of service has been supplemented with a large number of business to consumer (B2C) car sharing services, where commercial actors rent vehicles out to a registered group of users. In many markets, traditional car dealers or car rental companies remain the key actors. More recently, peer-to-peer (P2P) type of car sharing has been introduced that is more closely aligned with the idea of collaborative consumption in different sectors. The P2P sharing systems grew out of open source movement where software engineers and millions of volunteers developed codes and solved problems collectively [
14,
15]. This global, web-based movement paved the way for other kinds of peer produced content free for sharing, such as Wikipedia and numerous file-sharing applications. Hence, there is a strong historical connection between the emergence of peer-to-peer platforms and the general idea that the new technology-enabled practices could empower people [
16].
Following Frenken and Schor (2017), collaborative consumption is characterized by “underutilized privately owned resources that are made available to other parties for a limited time period and it is based on consumption of idle capacity” (Ibid, pp. 4–5). This definition suggests that P2P car sharing easily falls within the concept of collaborative consumption. P2P form of sharing may or may not be a recurring incidence and the users may be distributed over a wider geographical area than the users of the other types of car sharing.
Trust is crucial for successful sharing in online environments [
2,
17] and lack of trust has been described as a barrier for a wider diffusion of e-commerce and sharing applications [
18,
19,
20,
21]. In case of car sharing, the shared item is often of high value both from economic and safety perspectives, rendering lending and borrowing of private car difficult without firmly placing the element of ‘trust’. Trust is a fundamental but complex phenomenon and different forms of trust are at play in social groups and societies. The question is if the new forms of sharing are based on the same forms of trust as the traditional sharing, or if there are other mechanisms at play which need further elaboration and eventual uptake in policy-making.
A growing body of literature has begun to explore the differences in consumer attitudes, motives and travel behavior related to different car sharing platforms. Differences between users of Coop and B2C car-sharing types relate to income, education, and patterns of use [
22,
23] while different sets of attitudes and values have been found to motivate an interest in P2P schemes [
24,
25,
26,
27]. Although trust has been recognized as an essential element for car sharing, its variability among the “old” and “new” types of car sharing remains largely underexplored in literature [
28,
29].
This paper fills this gap by addressing the underlying trust building mechanisms for the different car sharing schemes. The study’s context is well suited since all three variants of car sharing are currently being provided in Norway. The research question guiding this study is whether the emerging peer-to-peer (P2P) type of car sharing rests on other forms of trust than those guiding cooperative and market-based models? This question is of relevance since a successful deployment of car-sharing vis-à-vis urban mobility systems necessitates a better understanding of consumers’ choice of different types of sharing models. This question also facilitates a broader discussion on how new business models, typical of the emerging sharing economy, may cause changes in everyday social interactions, cultures, and life in modern societies.
In the next section of this paper, we lay out the theoretical background for our analysis (
Section 2) and in
Section 3, we raise three hypotheses that will guide the later analysis. Next, we present the methodology along with the data material (
Section 4). In the subsequent section (
Section 5), results from multivariate analyses are presented followed by a discussion of key results (
Section 6). Key findings suggest that adhering to different sharing types is based on different types of trust and the Coop and P2P formats are supported by different trust constellations. The discussion presents some explanations and draws out implications for managing trust to support car sharing, as it can become one of the primary ways for transitioning to more sustainable mobility.
4. Data and Methodology
In this paper, we focus on the three largest car sharing providers in Norway—Bilkollektivet (
In Norwegian; “The Car Collective”) (Coop), Hertz (B2C) and Nabobil (
In Norwegian; “The neighbour’s car”) (P2P).
Bilkollektivet is a Cooperative car sharing scheme that was established in the mid-1990s in Oslo and later branched out to other Norwegian cities. Bilkollektivet was initially founded by a grass-root organization that considered car sharing as a way to support greener lifestyles. However, at the turn of the millennium, a number of for-profit car sharing companies were established. One of the crucial players today is
Hertz bilpool which has procured other B2C enterprises. The company currently has a fleet of over 150 vehicles, most of which are located in the Oslo metropolitan area, but also available in other Norwegian cities. In 2015,
Nabobil entered the market as the first P2P car sharing company in Norway. This service facilitates members who are seeking to rent vehicles for private use as well as members who are planning to rent out their car. The transactions between renters and peer-provider are coordinated by an operator that has an inbuilt insurance service minimizing the riskP2F. Currently Nabobil has more than about 170,000 registered users and 5500 vehicles in over 200 municipalities spread throughout Norway. In terms of users and vehicles, Nabobil is significantly larger than the entire non-P2P Norwegian car sharing sector. However, as many of the users in this scheme are passive members primarily renting out their cars, a direct comparison between these schemes is difficult [
65].
Data used in this study was collected through an online questionnaire distributed among users of different car sharing platforms in Norway’s four biggest citiesP4F Approximately 70 percent were in the larger Oslo region; 30 percent in Bergen, Trondheim, and Stavanger. The differences reflect the actual difference in the uptake of car sharing in these cities. The response rate recorded per scheme is as following:
The survey was distributed by the car sharing operators that were participants in a heterogenous group of stakeholders who were invited to participate in workshops and meetings as part of the research project this work comes out of. (The members of the stakeholder group did not influence the project analyses in any way). The operators did not wish to reveal how many members received the questionnaire, but since we know the total number of members in the three schemes, we have a rough estimate of the response rate. As indicated in
Table 1, response rate remains lowest for Nabobil (P2P), only one per cent. Car sharers distributed information to their members through e-mails and on their websites and as an incentive for participating respondents could enter a raffle with the opportunity to win NOK 500 (approx. €50). In Bilkollektivet (Coop), the response rate was estimated to be 16 per cent and 4 percent for Hertz (B2C). The survey was distributed in November–December 2017 and collected information on travel behavior, preferences, life circumstances, personality related questions, and levels of trust. Measures of ingroup and outgroup trust were based on standardized items as applied in the World Value Surveys [
66]. Questions pertaining to trust addressed levels of trust for family, neighbours, and acquaintances (ingroup) and for people one meets for the first time and people belonging to another religion (outgroup). Although trust in technology has been much discussed in the literature, the bulk of studies are of a theoretical or qualitative type [
58,
67], or they address particular technologies or social contexts [
68,
69,
70]. In this study, we focus on a more generic form of trust in new technologies where, to the best knowledge of the authors, no standardized scale exists. As an indicator for techno trust, we use three items addressing belief in technologies and its potential for improvement of life quality (e.g., “I welcome all new technological innovations”). All measures relied on the use of a 7-points Likert scale. As an indicator of technological confidence, we used frequency of use of various digital sharing applications (see
Table 2). We also included the following control variables: gender, age, and education.
Table 3 highlights the measures that had an acceptable scale reliability, although the techno trust value was low (Cronbach alpha scale = 0.568). This suggests that the latter scale should be treated with caution. However, although low score are not optimal, scores on the level of 0.05 are considered acceptable in exploratory studies [
71]. The Cronbach Alpha is sensitive for number of items and with short scales (e.g., scales with less than 5 items) it is common to find quite low Cronbach values. Additionally, Briggs and Cheek (1986) have argued that an alternative to CA for scale with few items may be the mean inter-item correlation. In this case this value is 0.297 which is within the range suggested by these authors (between 0.2 to 0.4) [
72]. All measures can be found in the
Appendix A.
5. Results
Table 4 shows key characteristics of the sample, differentiating between the three car-sharing schemes: “Nabobil” (P2P), “Bilkollektivet” (Coop) and “Hertz Carpool” (B2C). The sample consists of a majority of males, applicable to all three schemes. The dominance of male members has been found in earlier studies as well [
22]. Further, most members use car sharing infrequently, with only 5% using it on a weekly basis. Coop members are the most active users, have a high proportion of employed users and the smallest proportion of students. P2P users use the cars over a wider geographical area than members of the other two schemes.
A majority of car sharers have also been involved in other types of sharing. Only one in ten had never shared, borrowed, or lent out anything on digital platforms. As shown in
Table 2, use of digital market applications, such as eBay was most widely used, followed by short time accommodation like AirBNB. Interestingly, the P2P car sharers were significantly more active sharers than users of the other schemes.
As indicated in
Table 5, the concepts of outgroup and ingroup trust are positively correlated, but the same is not true for technology-based trust.
To further understand the connections between the car sharing schemes and trust forms, a binary logistic regression analysis was conducted. The regression analysis, presented in
Table 6, shows that the trust measures have a significant but different impact on choice of car sharing schemes, controlling for age, education, and gender. As demonstrated in the first model, both in- and outgroup trust negatively influence the use of P2P -sharing while high level of Techno trust, in contrast, significantly increase the likeliness of choosing this scheme. The second model shows that the Coop users display an opposite pattern; influenced positively by both in- and outgroup trust, and negatively by Techno trust. The third model shows that ingroup trust had a positive effect on B2C uptake, yet to a lower extent than Coop, and that people in this group tended to have lower education. This scheme was also more preferred by male drivers.
In summary, results indicate that high levels of in- and outgroup trust remain strong predictors for use of traditional cooperative car sharing. In striking contrast, P2P scheme, typically recognized as the corner stone of collaborative consumption, was preferred by drivers with lower levels of trust towards both people within the closer social circles of friends and family, as well as towards strangers in the wider social circles. The fact that P2P car sharing is attractive to people with lower level of in- and outgroup trust suggests that there are other mechanisms at play when social interaction and sharing of cars is undertaken in a network- and technology-based sharing format. The B2C type displays a middle position where ingroup trust has an impact, but outgroup and technology-based trust do not seem to have significant impacts.
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Based on the results above, the issue of whether the emerging peer-to-peer (P2P) type of car sharing rests on other forms of trust, than those guiding cooperative and market-based models, has been confirmed. The results support the first hypothesis, that Community-based car sharing, to a stronger degree, relies on ingroup trust, and the third hypothesis that P2P based sharing, to a higher degree, is based on a technological based trust (techno-trust). However, the second hypothesis, that B2C and P2P car sharing to a higher degree rely on outgroup trust, was not supported. The former bore semblance to the Coop sharing form with a stronger connection to ingroup trust than outgroup. One explanation could be that this scheme was originally rooted in a former cooperative sharing scheme that was bought by Hertz. Additionally, this scheme is likely to be backed by trust in institutions, a concept that was not included in the original survey.
6.1. Tentative Explanations
An intriguing question is why we find such strong variations in trust forms between the older and newer types of car sharing. A salient reason for high in- and outgroup trust among Coop users could simply be that this car sharing type is attracting people who, in general, are trustful of others. As mentioned before, Coop emerged from the green movement of the 1990s and consequently, people sharing similar identities and opinions are attracted to this scheme. It is possible that image of the enterprise itself may be attracting a particular group of people that share much of the same beliefs and meaning, adhering to the same type of institutional logics of sharing. Given that this group of car sharers live primarily in households with young children might perhaps also be a reason for being more family oriented and trustful as compared to the P2P users. Studies have, on the other hand, given evidence of that P2P users are mainly driven by self-centered and utilitarian motives, rather than social or environmental ones [
24,
25,
27,
73]. Although no generational factor seems to be involved, different lifestyles might be contributing towards the differences noted in this study.
Additionally, the actual use of cooperative car sharing schemes might be further cementing stronger trust, given a higher level of familiarity with people in the community the member belongs to. As demonstrated in earlier research, repeated successful interaction with the same people over time is likely to build up trust [
74,
75]. Engagement in sharing activities is sometimes associated with altruistic and social values beneficial for the larger society, and social engagement is further seen as an enabler for building and solidifying trust [
44,
76]. This is akin to the principle of reciprocity present in denser social network, that over time generates cohesiveness and social trust [
77]. In contrast, P2P is based on occasional exchanges reaching far beyond an individual’s private social network. It is only occasionally that car sharing through this scheme involves people who know each other or have anything in common than an exclusive interest in sharing cars. Hence, the nature of the interaction does not automatically support building and sustaining of mutual trust.
It is clear that different formats of car sharing require different forms of trust to operate. In the Cooperative form, members pay a standard membership fee and have “stakes” in the enterprise, something that builds on a stronger form of trust. Membership, thus, presupposes some trust in the community. P2P, on other hand, is based on interactions where strong relational trust to the other users is less relevant for the members. This does not mean that trust altogether is irrelevant, but that other aspects may be more significant such as trust and confidence in the effectiveness of online reputation systems, reliance on social identity markers, system providers, insurance systems, etc. Studies highlight that (technology based) reputation system is crucial for consumer to establish trust in online-environments [
19,
31]. The active use of other sharing applications among the P2P car sharers suggests that experience and skills to use digital technology is crucial.
6.2. Theoretical and Empirical Contribution
The empirical findings presented in this study add to the body of knowledge on emergence of different car-sharing platforms, variations between some different socio-demographic indicators, user behavior, preferences, and motivations related to car sharing. Previous studies found differences between users of Coop and B2C car-sharing related to income, education, and patterns of use and different attitudes, whereas values have been found to motivate an interest in P2P schemes [
22,
24,
25,
26]. This study demonstrates that a significant variation in trust exists as well across the different car sharing schemes.
Our findings echo previous studies indicating that a different set of institutional logics is taking hold as sharing shifts to digital platforms, gradually moving away from non-profit communities [
35,
37] As recently argued by Grahbner and König [
43], sharing economy appears to be transcending both pre-industrial communities and traditional market coordination. Driven foremost by development of ICT, new forms of socio-economic coordination have emerged. Although this study could not provide extensive information about the norms, values and meanings guiding the members of different sharing organizations, it demonstrated that peer-to-peer sharing draws on different forms of trust. We should note, however, that even though we draw connections between institutional logics and sharing schemes, studies suggest that multiple logics are often at play when people move between different social situations [
78]. It is therefore likely that users of the three car sharing schemes discussed here may adhere to different sets of logic with different types of trust, changing over time and context of use.
Results further suggest that P2P sharing is not an extension of older types of sharing, but a new form based on “network-based logic” where the risk is mitigated by reliance on technology rather than strong ties in cohesive communities. As argued by Belk (2014), Bardhi and Echardt (2012), and others, the inherent logic might bear strong similarities to the logics guiding economic transactions which are dominated by rational trust. Our findings are adjacent to the arguments that new technologies, in combination with a shrinking trust in institutions, are triggering an upscaling of “distributed” trust that flows vertically between people and digital platforms [
17,
58,
79]. Key elements to build up trust here are technological affordances provided by advanced algorithms, safe economic transaction systems and well-functioning reputation mechanisms where transactions and actors are evaluated for each sharing session. Our results here add to the body of work indicating that young people have more confidence in technology-players like Google and Facebook. This again suggests that there might be a new generation of P2P-users that adhere to another type of “sharing logic” [
70].
Following this line of thinking, trust is redistributed from people to technologies. However, it could also be that the new network-based sharing is founded on a lighter and “swifter trust” than what is captured in the concepts of in- and outgroup trust. The term swift trust refers to trust that is quickly established for a limited period of time before it fades away, and studies on network-based collaboration have suggested that shared identities and role descriptions can be important to establish swift trust in networked environments [
56,
57]. Hence, it seems that a thinner form of trust is at play within peer-to-peer network sharing that is hard to capture through old concepts.
6.3. Implications
This study suggests that a high level of general trust in others, as is the case for Norway and the other Nordic countries [
80], is of little value for further development of the P2P car sharing variant. It is more likely that growth in this type of sharing scheme will be based on the functioning of trust in the digital network algorithms, reputation-based mechanisms, and strong institutions. Given that car sharing is an emerging phenomenon and still not one of the mainstream modes guiding daily travel behavior in the Norwegian urban areas, we further emphasize the need to take the local conditions of trust into account. To date, the Norwegian municipalities have shied away from conducting open, transparent, and meaningful public engagement on car sharing. Car sharing has primarily emerged as an independent initiative which, in parlance of business development stages, is still at a ‘niche’ stage. As a new and more sustainable way of travel in urban regions, it is still a relatively immature social practice compared to private ownership [
13]. However, as digitalization and technological interfaces gain prominence in urban and transport planning practices (cf. smart cities and smart mobilities), it is important to engage different sub-sets of urban population on an ongoing basis. Further, through adopting an indicator-based approach, Norwegian municipalities can both address and manage the growth of car sharing through plotting key indicators affecting the uptake of the different business models of car sharing. A closer monitoring of car sharing systems could support development of sustainable urban environments, and studies have found that this kind of regulation is likely to be welcomed by the public [
63]. Establishing monitoring systems would be an important step forward and will provide a suitable platform to address human factors like trust which are not easily captured in business or technical indicators.
6.4. Next Steps
This study is among the first to investigate how various forms of trust are related to car sharing platforms, and the variations documented here suggest that further studies are needed. Even though Norway scores high on generalized trust levels, we found that discrepancies exist between the members of P2P and Coop/B2C. It seems that trust is being interpreted differently in different domains. For example, car sharing in Norway is being envisioned as a set of standard protocols which should be tied to an organization, and organizational trust rather than personal trust. Personal trust, in the case of P2P members, is being replaced by technology-based trust and might be leaning heavily towards assessment of web-based reputation mechanisms. Other risk-reducing mechanisms, related to institutional trust and forging of “swift trust” between users based on shared identities or cultures, should also be further explored as explanations for sharing in P2P online groups.
It is interesting to note that Coop users are actively using car sharing while many P2P are only passive participants. While the community-based sharing forms have had strong positive symbolic value for an older generation, this may not to be the case for the new generation of P2P sharers. Thus, differences in underlying trust structures might be related to shifts in lifestyles. It is also vital to further probe to what extent does spatial location and easy accessibility to facilities on foot, bicycle, and public transport in daily lives, play a role in this contrasting set of values contra lifestyle. This study suggests that P2P members use the shared cars on distant trips than the users of other two schemes whose trips are more local, and thus of relatively short trip length.
Given that embedded group-based trust is not needed to spur growth in P2P services, as long as other preconditions are established, the mechanisms and dynamics behind the new and emerging forms of trust and engagement in digital sharing deserves to be further explored based on a judicious mix of qualitative and quantitative methods. Our limited focus on three types of trust needs to be bolstered through studies on other forms of trust.