BCBusiness

August 2015 The Sharing Game

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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* sourcE: "sHaring is tHE nEW buying," vision critical, 2014 august 2015 BCBusiness 29 occupancy ever and that their studies show that people staying at Airbnbs are people who never would have stayed as long—or even trav- elled to a city—without that option. "The pie is just growing." That's not completely smoke and mirrors. At least one academic study suggests that Uber- type services, for example, help "thicken" what is traditionally a thin market. People often don't take taxis because they seem hard to get and unreliable—but once it feels as though getting a ride is easy (that there's a "thick supply"), they'll become more likely to use all taxi-type services more regularly, says the paper from UBC researchers Simon Harding and others. And, after all, that's the argument used for tran- sit: demonstrate to the public that the service is fast and frequent and they'll pile in. On the other hand, other independent research shows that Airbnb, for one, is having an impact. A recent Texas study concluded that hotel revenues declined by about half a per cent for each 10 per cent increase in Airbnb supply. In Austin, the city where Airbnb is the most popular, that meant a 13 per cent revenue loss overall—with lower-cost hotels, the ones cater- ing to tourists, the most a"ected. It's the same story when it comes to another Airbnb impact that people worry about, which is the way it sucks up relatively low-cost housing space that becomes unavailable to local renters. Again, Zi¤in says that Airbnb is "too small to have an impact"—which might be true in some cities, but where there's a high demand for both tour- ist and resident space, maybe not. The New York City attorney general issued a report in 2014 concluding that, with 4,600 units in the city being rented out almost exclusively as Airbnb rentals year-round, the city was losing housing units that would otherwise have gone to long- term residents. As for Uber, UBC transporta- tion consultant Joe Sulmona argued in a recent OF SHARERS ASSOCIATE LOANER VEHICLES WITH SUSTAINABILITY. ONLY 28% ASSOCIATE RETAIL STORES WITH SUSTAINABILITY * 46% OF SHARERS ASSOCIATE SHARING PLACES TO STAY WITH COMMUNITY. ONLY 25% ASSOCIATE RETAIL STORES WITH COMMUNITY * 41% OF SHARERS ASSOCIATE LOANER PRODUCTS WITH HELPING OTHERS. ONLY 12% ASSOCIATE RETAIL STORES WITH HELPING OTHERS * 48% OUR HOME IS YOUR HOME Vancouverites Sylvain Senez and Alexis Fletcher rent out rooms in their Commercial Drive bungalow through Airbnb

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