
The Market Size And Strength Of The Major Digital Platform Companies Has Invited International Concern About How Such Firms Should Best Be Regulated To Serve The Interests Of Wider Society, With A Particular Emphasis On The Need For New Anti-trust Legislation. Using A Normative Innovation Systems Approach, This Paper Investigates How Current Anti-trust Models May Insufficiently Address The Value-extracting Features Of Existing Data-intensive And Platform-oriented Industry Behaviour And Business Models. To Do So, We Employ The Concept Of Economic Rents To Investigate How Digital Platforms Create And Extract Value. Two Forms Of Rent Are Elaborated: 'network Monopoly Rents' And 'algorithmic Rents.' By Identifying Such Rents More Precisely, Policymakers And Researchers Can Better Direct Regulatory Investigations, As Well As Broader Industrial And Innovation Policy Approaches, To Shape The Features Of Platform-driven Digital Markets-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates how current anti-trust models fail to address the value-extracting behaviors of dominant digital platform companies. Authors Martin Moore and Damian Tambini utilize a normative innovation systems approach to analyze the market power of major tech firms. By examining the concept of economic rents, the authors argue for a more precise regulatory framework that accounts for the unique business models of data-intensive industries.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this work as a critical contribution to the ongoing debate regarding digital market regulation and corporate oversight. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the clarity with which the authors define complex economic concepts for a policy-oriented audience.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0197616135
ISBN-13:
9780197616130
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