Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 01 | Page 23

COMMENT Dr Mukhisa Kituyi, Secretary-General of UNCTAD. The sharing economy is booming on many accounts. Although most peer-to-peer businesses are recent, some such as Uber, Airbnb, eBay, have evolved into multi-billion companies, serving millions of clients and expanding consumer choice. However, the sharing economy’s net impact remains unclear. It exposes users to cybercrime. And it may actually harm inclusiveness, as its cost-cutting features risk (i) reducing earnings of traditional firms, (ii) providing fewer jobs with less job security and fewer benefits than traditional employment, and (iii) publicly accepted quality standards. The sharing economy also essentially www.intelligentcio.com exempts entire classes of businesses from safety regulations or taxes just because they provide their services online. These worries concern consumer protection and social protection of the many part-time employees that often provide peer-topeer services. Peer-to-peer transactions also tend to erode tax revenues, which hampers the public provision of basic goods and services example water and sanitation that the poor need, but that the sharing economy does generally not provide. Only universally applicable regulation can address these concerns. A deeper understanding of the changes taking place in our economies, societies and cultures is essential to harness the ICT-induced transformations of economies and societies for the SDGs. Going forward, constructive international cooperation will be vital to address a host of emerging issues, from concerns about cybercrime to questions of inclusiveness and the fact that ICT can magnify tax avoidance with potentially worrying impacts on the provision of basic goods and services. At UNCTAD, we have been addressing these issues, including through serving as the secretariat for the Commission on Science and Technology for Development, and will continue playing our role in harnessing ICTs for sustainable development. INTELLIGENTCIO 23