Sharing Economies’ Initiatives in Municipal Authorities’ Perspective: Research Evidence from Poland in the Context of Smart Cities’ Development
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- little empirical research on the sharing economy,
- the necessity of analyzing the SE in emerging and developing economies, which is revealed in the literature,
- the need to analyze the institutional and organizational context of the sharing economy development,
- the authors of this article decided to cover the topic of the sharing economies’ initiatives in a municipal authorities’ perspective.
- identifying the directions and problems of the development of the sharing economy in the urban environment,
- few holistic empirical studies relating to the use of the sharing economy in practice, in particular in developing or emerging economies,
- subjective scope related to a large representative research sample that allows one to study the interest and scale of implementation of various forms of the sharing economy in the national perspective, which provides important conclusions and practical observations,
- highlighting the need for institutional and organizational support of cities (regions or countries) for the sharing economy, provided both to develop a business model favoring sustainable consumption and production, and to prevent abuse related to the lack of clear legal and organizational regulations for this form of business activity,
- assessing the support of municipal authorities in the development of the sharing economy in Poland.
2. Literature Studies
2.1. The Idea and Features of the Sharing Economy
- perceiving it as a socio-economic system that includes (1) specific participants, (2) specific communication and exchange channels and (3) socially established relationships among participants in this system and its environment [71];
- focusing on maximizing the usability and economic and ecological efficiency of the use of goods and services;
- emotional branding of relationships among system participants (operating in the B2C or C2C system) resulting from direct contact [72];
- constant volatility resulting from the constant clash of economic and social goals;
- high adaptability to changing economic and technological conditions;
- no separate legal regulations allowing full use of the principles of laissez-faire.
2.2. Sharing Economy in a Smart City
- providing socio-environmental sustainability.
3. Materials and Methods
- the use of SEs in cities and SE support by city authorities involving large research trials.
- What SE forms are the most common in Polish cities?
- Do and how do the city authorities in Poland support the use of the SE?
- What part of Polish cities can be considered smart in the context of using and supporting the SE?
- Level 1: using incentives (organizational or financial) for initiators of SE projects,
- Level 2: institutional separation of a unit/position in the city administration that supports SE projects,
- Level 3: city self-involvement, i.e., initiating SE projects.
- (1)
- sharing workspace
- (2)
- and participation in social or cultural crowdfunding.
- very poor
- poor
- average
- good
- very good.
4. Results
4.1. Assessment of the City Involvement in SE Initiatives
4.2. Assessment of the Scope of Using SE Forms in Polish Cities
4.3. Determinants of the Development of SE in Cities
5. Discussion
- low availability of housing resources preventing their free sharing,
- low knowledge and awareness of SE ideas, forms and platforms,
- lack of universal access to the Internet and ICT infrastructure,
- lack of institutional and legal regulations for individual forms of SE.
- (1)
- in the field of creating institutional and legal frameworks for the development of business models represented by the SE (in Poland it is particularly visible with the example of car sharing, which almost always takes place with the participation of city authorities, promotion of pro-ecological solutions, cooperation with modern business or identification of exchange places),
- (2)
- in the context of promotion and education on sustainable consumption and resource saving,
- (3)
- in the field of providing external urban space and premises for initiatives in the field of SE (co-working; clothes swap; toy swap),
- (4)
- in terms of cooperation with enterprises regarding the organization and promotion of exchange platforms, it is also an opportunity to strengthen the image of the city as an entity acting for sustainable development.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type of Shared Resources | Sharing Form | Nature of the Sharing Form |
---|---|---|
Housing Resources | room sharing | accessibility of rooms available to short-term visitors [133] |
co-housing | shared use of certain living spaces (e.g., laundry room, parking, recreation area, playground, etc.) [134] | |
couch surfing | free-of-charge use of accommodation all over the world as part of the hospitality exchange [135] | |
Transport Resources | carpooling | using passenger cars as part of a public transport system [136,137] |
Workspace | coworking | sharing a common space for work, usually office [138] |
Objects of Daily Use | toy swap | exchange of toys allowing their multiple use [139] |
clothes swap | exchange of clothes allowing their multiple use | |
Financial Resources | crowdfunding | joint financing of unusual ventures through online fundraising [140] |
No. | Question | Rated Area |
---|---|---|
1. | Use of municipal (organizational/financial) incentives for entities dealing with sharing economy | Assessment of the scale of city support for SE initiatives |
2. | A person/unit managing sharing economy operations in the municipal office | |
3. | The scope of sharing economy initiatives undertaken by the city (sharing, co-creation, co-buying, co-financing, etc.) | |
4. | City authorities supporting the creation of coworking spaces | Assessment of the direct support of the city for SE initiatives |
5. | Involvement of city authorities in crowdfunding initiatives | |
6. | City room sharing ratio (renting room for residents for short periods/stays of visitors) | Assessment of sharing housing resources |
7. | City co-housing ratio (combination of independent flats in a common space, e.g., kitchen, laundry room) | |
8. | City couch surfing ratio (the use of platforms offering free accommodation for visitors from the country and the world) | |
9. | City carpooling ratio (car sharing, e.g., BlaBlaCar, Uber, Wolneauto.pl) | Assessment of sharing transport resources |
10. | The presence of a coworking space in the city (the possibility of individual or joint work on rented space, usually office space, used mainly in the context of freelance professions) | Assessment of coworking spaces |
11. | City clothes swap or toy swap activity ratio (cashless exchange of clothes or toys) | Assessment of sharing everyday items |
12. | Crowdfunding ratio (social fundraising for a specific purpose) | Assessment of co-financing |
No. | Question | Average Rating |
---|---|---|
1. | Use of municipal (organizational/financial) incentives for entities dealing with sharing economy | 2.41 |
2. | A person/unit managing sharing economy operations in the municipal office | 2.15 |
3. | The scope of sharing economy initiatives undertaken by the city (sharing, co-creation, co-buying, co-financing, etc.) | 2.60 |
4. | City authorities supporting the creation of coworking spaces | 2.47 |
5. | Involvement of city authorities in crowdfunding initiatives | 2.47 |
No. | Specification | Note |
---|---|---|
1. | City room sharing ratio (renting room for residents for short periods/stays of visitors) | 2.71 |
2. | City co-housing ratio (combination of independent flats in a common space, e.g., kitchen, laundry room) | 2.01 |
3. | City couch surfing ratio (the use of platforms offering free accommodation for visitors from the country and the world) | 2.24 |
4. | City carpooling ratio (car sharing, e.g., BlaBlaCar, Uber, Wolneauto.pl) | 2.50 |
5. | The presence of a coworking space in the city (the possibility of individual or joint work on rented space, usually office space, used mainly in the context of freelance professions) | 2.54 |
6. | City clothes swap or toy swap activity ratio (cashless exchange of clothes or toys) | 2.53 |
7. | Crowdfunding ratio (social fundraising for a specific purpose) | 2.62 |
Question | Per Capita Income | Population |
---|---|---|
Use of municipal (organizational/financial) incentives for entities dealing with sharing economy | 0.1063 | 0.4072 * |
A person/unit managing sharing economy operations in the municipal office | 0.0937 | 0.2827 * |
The scope of sharing economy initiatives undertaken by the city (sharing, co-creation, co-buying, co-financing, etc.) | 0.1651 * | 0.3394 * |
Question | Spearman’s Rank Correlation Coefficient |
---|---|
City room sharing ratio (renting room for residents for short periods/stays of visitors) | 0.4107 * |
City co-housing ratio (combination of independent flats in a common space, e.g., kitchen, laundry room) | 0.3963 * |
City couch surfing ratio (the use of platforms offering free accommodation for visitors from the country and the world) | 0.5005 * |
City carpooling ratio (car sharing, e.g., BlaBlaCar, Uber, Wolneauto.pl) | 0.4778 * |
The presence of a coworking space in the city (the possibility of individual or joint work on rented space, usually office space, used mainly in the context of freelance professions) | 0.5004 * |
City clothes swap or toy swap activity ratio (cashless exchange of clothes or toys) | 0.5136 * |
Crowdfunding ratio (social fundraising for a specific purpose) | 0.5382 * |
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Jonek-Kowalska, I.; Wolniak, R. Sharing Economies’ Initiatives in Municipal Authorities’ Perspective: Research Evidence from Poland in the Context of Smart Cities’ Development. Sustainability 2022, 14, 2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042064
Jonek-Kowalska I, Wolniak R. Sharing Economies’ Initiatives in Municipal Authorities’ Perspective: Research Evidence from Poland in the Context of Smart Cities’ Development. Sustainability. 2022; 14(4):2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042064
Chicago/Turabian StyleJonek-Kowalska, Izabela, and Radosław Wolniak. 2022. "Sharing Economies’ Initiatives in Municipal Authorities’ Perspective: Research Evidence from Poland in the Context of Smart Cities’ Development" Sustainability 14, no. 4: 2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042064
APA StyleJonek-Kowalska, I., & Wolniak, R. (2022). Sharing Economies’ Initiatives in Municipal Authorities’ Perspective: Research Evidence from Poland in the Context of Smart Cities’ Development. Sustainability, 14(4), 2064. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14042064