#15 - Big Tech and Antitrust Policy - w/ Victor Menaldo

#15 - Big Tech and Antitrust Policy - w/ Victor Menaldo

In this episode, Professor Victor Menaldo and Nicolas Wittstock explore the facts, logic, and evidence behind the consumer welfare approach to antitrust. That approach asks very simple questions: what is the effect of mergers between competitors or the behavior of firms with market power on prices and innovation? Since the early 1980s, this paradigm—away from a populist “big is bad” approach—has undergirded some of the greatest innovations the world has ever seen, including smartphones, software, and digital platforms that connect the globe together while charging a price equal to zero for their services.

The consensus that antitrust should be exclusively about the price of goods and services and innovation is currently under attack by some scholars, pundits, politicians, and advocacy groups. Critics claim that lax antitrust has led to increased market concentration and monopolies in the tech sector, ushering in “less entrepreneurship”, “restrictions on free speech”, “lower privacy protections”, and “the abuse of consumer data”. Companies like Amazon are accused of harming players up and down the retail supply chain from selling their own goods in a digital marketplace they control or pricing out brick and mortar retailers. They are also accused of exacerbating inequality and being too systemically important due to their size, market impact, interconnectedness, and low “substitutability”. Finally, there is the fear that big tech firms’ economic power translates into political power and is bad for democracy.

We set the record straight on what digital platforms actually are (explain the economics of multi-sided markets), what market concentration actually says about competition and consumer welfare (fewer rivals may imply greater efficiency and thus lower prices), how to define and measure “monopoly” (none of the big tech firms satisfy the definition), how to identify whether firms abuse their market power to crimp competition (a technical issue that is actually quite rare) and what remedies, if any, should be employed by policymakers in relation to digital platforms. We suggest that breaking up big tech is a radical solution in search of a problem.


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Avsnitt(92)

#92 - We, the Data - w/ Wendy Wong

#92 - We, the Data - w/ Wendy Wong

In this episode, Prof. James Long speaks to Prof. Wendy Wong of the University of British Columbia about her new book: "We, the Data: Human Rights in the Digital Age".

21 Dec 20231h

#91 - Regulation of Sexual Practices in the US - w/ Feler Bose

#91 - Regulation of Sexual Practices in the US - w/ Feler Bose

In this episode, Feler Bose of Indiana University East School of Business and Economics speaks about the regulation of sexual practices in the US.

25 Juni 202343min

#90 - Pitfalls of Democratization - w/ Jorge Rojas-Vallejos

#90 - Pitfalls of Democratization - w/ Jorge Rojas-Vallejos

In this episode, Prof. Jorge Rojas-Vallejos of Universidad Andres Bello in Chile discusses ongoing political reforms in Chile.

4 Maj 202342min

#89 - Digital Media, Elites, and Masses - w/ Martin Gurri

#89 - Digital Media, Elites, and Masses - w/ Martin Gurri

In this episode, former CIA Media analyst and author Martin Gurri describes how digital technologies have maybe irreversibly changed the information landscape, with profound implications for governanc...

6 Mars 202340min

#88 - Venture Capital Investment in Green Tech - w/ Nick de la Forge

#88 - Venture Capital Investment in Green Tech - w/ Nick de la Forge

In this episode, Nick De La Forge describes the approach and practice of German Venture Fund Planet A Ventures, of which Nick is a co-founder.

30 Jan 202336min

#87 - Is Technology Value-Neutral? - w/ Boaz Miller

#87 - Is Technology Value-Neutral? - w/ Boaz Miller

In this episode, Boaz Miller of Zefat Academic College discusses to what extent technologies have values embedded in them and what political insights can be gleaned from that.

9 Jan 202351min

#86 - How Social Scientists Reshaped US Foreign Policy-Making - w/ Daniel Bessner

#86 - How Social Scientists Reshaped US Foreign Policy-Making - w/ Daniel Bessner

In this episode, Prof. Daniel Bessner of the University of Washington discusses his 2018 book "Democracy in Exile", describing the crucial impact that social scientists had in reshaping political inst...

24 Okt 202237min

#85 - The Diploma Divide - w/ Joan Williams

#85 - The Diploma Divide - w/ Joan Williams

In this episode, Prof. Joan Williams of the University of California, Hastings, speaks about her new initiative: The Diploma Divide, arguing that Americans must grapple with the realities of economic ...

10 Okt 202239min

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