I read today’s
Diane Coyle post on commodification of services which is (to some extent, Diane
says) a reply to my earliest post, but to be honest I do not see how it is a reply.
I basically
agree with almost all that Diane writes today (here).
Primo: Gig
economy with one-off deals and extremely fast turnover of labor breaks the relations
of confidence and trust that are often established between people (buyers and
sellers). If my tax driver changes all the time, dry cleaner stays in his job
one week, my professors fluctuate quarter by quarter, it seems to me obvious that
this type of flexibilization of labor market ---while probably leading to gains
in productivity—reduces incentive to establish longer term relationships and thus
to invest in being “nice”. It does not mean that I am going to be rude to a
waiter and throw a plate at him, but it means that I am not going to invest in
a chit-chat that otherwise I would. And he/she would behave the same. To put it
in economic terms, it does not pay to be
nice (high fixed cost) if you keep on having only one-off relationships. (Incidentally,
it is not too different from today’s culture of hook-up. While it probably increases
freedom and sexual pleasure, it surely does not contribute to relationships.)
Secundo: My second
post (here) dealt with the intrusion of marketization in family relations. I
used the examples of food consumed, individually and outside of home not
together over a dinner table, and of external tutoring of kids. Both were
activities previously done by parents and they I believe tended to make
relations between family members closer. But now these ties no longer exist,
replaced by purchased food and purchased tutoring.
My third
example was living alone which again comes with higher income and is something
that people really love to do and so they choose it whenever they can afford (I do it, most of the time,
myself). But is it helpful for relations? I think, not.
I think that
both points are so incontrovertibly true that only due to some misunderstanding
can we reach different conclusions. This is why I wanted to clarify them here.
I enjoy discussion
with Diane because I think that we have very similar basic opinions. Perhaps
the difference is that I often see advances in marketization or in income as not
100% improvements in all human dimensions.
In a most economistic way, I think
we always gain some and lose some. Sure, by our choice (say, to hire tutors or
to live alone) we show that we care more about having a bathroom and a kitchen to
ourselves or not to be bothered too much with kids’ homework which makes us probably
lead happier lives as individuals. But we lose some, in lessening the ties with
other people.
At the end,
as in Herzog’s new movie “Lo and behold: the reveries of an interconnected word”,
we can ask: “Can we envisage a life as automatons purely exchanging services
and goods without seeing each other (ordering pizza, cleaners, shirts on the Internet),
talking to people only on the web, eating solo, listening to music alone with
first-rate audio speakers etc. and just having every single activity be a market transaction”. Yes, we can, the modern IT wizards say. But
then Herzog asks “Can we love?”.
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