4. The Economics of Social Production
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Summary of the chapter
Overview
Motivation
Social Production: Feasibility Conditions and Organizational Form
Transaction Costs and Efficiency
The Emergence of Social Production in the Digitially Networked Environment
The Interface of Social Production and Market-Based Businesses
Sources
Sources cited in the chapter
Other relevant readings
Case Studies
Supporting examples
From page 120-121
"... Goods, services, and resources that, in the industrial stage of the information economy required large-scale, concentrated capital investment to provision, are now subject to a changing technological environment that can make sharing a better way of achieving the same results than can states, markets, or their hybrid, regulated industries..."
John Seely Brown makes the point for sharing even in capital-intensive markets such as the auto industry where he contrasts Toyota's cooperation between and among its suppliers to Detroit's command and control relationships with its suppliers. This is talked about in his new book "The Only Sustainable Edge: Why Business Strategy Depends on Productive Friction and Dynamic Specialization" ([Amazon link here]http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1591397200/sr=8-1/qid=1145751781/ref=pd_bbs_1/102-3528198-0636147?%5Fencoding=UTF8). The book isn't out yet, but he talks about it in a podcast which is available at ITConversations.com ([link here]http://www.itconversations.com/shows/detail610.html)
One other point. Sharing presumes more transparency in the production process and results in types of sharing that not only involve contributions of inputs/goods/time, but contributions of better methods of achieving the goal of sharing. Think cooperative networks of faculty sharing their course notes and the result that this makes it easier for new entrants into the community (those teaching new courses and those new to teaching).