Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Will A Sharing Economy Be A Growing Economy?
Will A Sharing Economy Be A Growing Economy?
Mar 19, 2026 2:04 AM

John O. McGinnis, the George C. Dix Professor in Constitutional Law at Northwestern University, says we are in the midst of a sharing economy, and that’s a good thing. (Don’t get all socialist on me; a sharing economy is one driven by service and technology. We are not going to have to pool our food in mune.) McGinnis says this type of economy is good for liberty as well.

There are three basic features of a sharing economy:

It reduces costs, by matching up real-time idle services and resources with people in need.It employs the hard-to-employ, say, people who need a very flexible schedule.It creates new jobs – jobs that didn’t exist before.

This is all good, right? There are critics:

Guy Standing, a professor of Development Studies at the University of London’s School of African and Oriental Studies, attacks the sharing economy’s uncertainty – workers cannot be sure of their next gig. But people work “at will” in traditional jobs as well. Employees are laid off panies every day, often leaving as specialists in skills that are no longer needed. As the article implies, many of those in the sharing economy are undertaking a diversity of tasks (driving, gardening, being a chef). Such diversification helps address uncertainty.

There are others that say workers in a shared economy will be exploited financially, even using “wage slavery” as a description of jobs in a shared economy.

McGinnis counters:

The term “wage slavery” attempts to deconstruct and invert the essence of markets, where the freedom to choose has allowed the vast majority of people to live ever more abundantly over the centuries. The benefits are no more a social construct than gravity. The sharing economy is just another variation on this happy truth.

Read “The Sharing Economy as an Economy of Freedom” at the Library of Law and Liberty.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Acton Commentary: Reading it Wrong – Again
Can you discern a nation’s spirit, even its economic genius, from the literature it produces? That’s long been a pastime of literary critics, including those who frequently see the “original sins” of Puritanism and capitalism in the stony heart of Americans. Writing in Commentary Magazine, Fred Siegel looks at just this problem in a new appreciation of cultural critic and iconoclast Bernard DeVoto’s three-decade campaign to rescue American letters from the perception that European aesthetics were superior to the homegrown...
Will the health reform bill ‘improve the character’ of America?
A good back-and-forth at in character on health care reform between Karen Davenport and Heather R. Higgins. Question: Will the implementation of the health-care bill passed by Congress improve the character of our country? Davenport says “yes”: While we cede some rights, we also assume new responsibilities. First, we assume the responsibility to obtain and maintain coverage for ourselves, and acknowledge that we cannot wait to purchase health insurance until we are sick. We also take on greater responsibility for...
Commentary: Prophet Jim Wallis and the Ecclesia of Economic Ignorance
Sign up for Acton News & Commentary here. This week, I contributed a piece on Jim Wallis’ new book. +++++++++ This class of the very poor – those who are just on the borders of pauperism or fairly over the borders – is rapidly growing. Wealth is increasing very fast; poverty, even pauperism, is increasing still more rapidly. – Washington Gladden, Applied Christianity (1886) For three decades, we have experienced a social engineered inequality that is really a sin –...
Brooks: ‘Spreading the Wealth’ Isn’t Fair
A very good piece on taxation, e inequality and fairness in today’s Wall Street Journal by Arthur C. Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute. Brooks, a frequent guest speaker at Acton events, is also author of “The Battle: How the Fight Between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America’s Future”, ing from Basic Books in June. Watch for the review on the PowerBlog soon. Simple facts about our tax system do not support the contention that it is...
Religion & Liberty: A Rare and Tenuous Freedom
The new issue of Religion & Liberty, featuring an interview with Nina Shea, is now available online. A February preview of Shea’s interview, which was an exclusive for PowerBlog readers, can be found here. Shea pays tribute to the ten year collapse munism in Eastern Europe, which began in the fall of 1989. The entire issue is dedicated to those who toiled for freedom. Shea is able to make the connection between important events and times in the Cold War...
Why Not Just Dispose of Nuclear Waste in the Sun?
PopSci follows up with the question I asked awhile back, “Why Not Just Dispose of Nuclear Waste in the Sun?” The piece raises doubts about launch reliability: “It’s a bummer when a satellite ends up underwater, but it’s an entirely different story if that rocket is packing a few hundred pounds of uranium. And if the uranium caught fire, it could stay airborne and circulate for months, dusting the globe with radioactive ash. Still seem like a good idea?” This...
Alejandro Chafuen Receives Global Leadership Award
Alex ChafuenCongratulations to Acton board member and Senior Fellow Alejandro A. Chafuen who received the Global Leadership Award at Wellington College in the UK on April 2. The award was co-sponsored by The World Congress of Families and The Bow Group. Alex is president of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, and has been a great friend and advisor to Acton for many years. The work he and Atlas have done to support “intellectual entrepreneurs” worldwide — those who advance the...
Make Mine Freedom (1948)
A reader sends on this fun video. Anyone know where can I get a bottle of this Dr. Utopia’s Ism elixir? Looks tasty. Is one sip enough? ...
Finding Out What’s In The Health Care Bill is Fun!
Remember when Nancy Pelosi said that the House needed to pass the health care reform legislation so we could find out what was in it? Well, it turns out that she might have done Congress a big favor by slowing things down and allowing her House members to figure out what was in the bill before passing it. I mean, I’m only saying that because it seems that in the process of passing the bill Congress may have accidentally left...
On Tax Day in SoCal: Michael Novak to speak on “The Moral Foundation of Markets”
Heads up to those in the Southern California area: Distinguished scholar, author, and former Ambassador Michael Novak will give an April 15 lecture at Fuller Theological Seminary on “The Moral Foundation of Markets.” Novak will argue for the need to re-establish an informed and well-reasoned understanding of both the value of markets for human well-being and the moral foundation necessary for their continued survival. Among other achievements, Novak is the 1994 winner of the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved