The EU is angling to set a rulebook for digital markets which could be adopted around the world. To achieve this, its draft regulations need improvement.
The EU has a renowned
ability to leverage its market size in order to influence regulatory
standards beyond its borders – the so-called Brussels effect. For example, the US is now closer than ever
to adopting a comprehensive federal privacy law, demonstrating the
global influence of the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation. The EU
now wants to set global standards for digital platforms such as Facebook
and Google, to make the markets they operate in fairer and more
contestable. Digital markets may well be susceptible to the Brussels
effect: many countries are considering new regulations, and the large
technology firms that operate globally do not want regulatory
fragmentation. But the Union’s attempt to develop and export its digital
rulebook will require refinement if it is to succeed.
Previous
EU antitrust cases against American tech giants and its proposals for
regulation caused transatlantic tension. The Obama administration viewed
large American tech firms as national champions. President Trump was
also critical of the EU’s attempts to discipline them: “Your tax lady,
she hates the US”, he said of competition commissioner Margrethe
Vestager. However, the academic and political consensus in the US has
now shifted towards the European position. In 2019, an influential report
by the US’s Stigler Centre confirmed many of the EU’s concerns. Since
then, large technology firms have alienated both sides of US politics.
Many Republicans were outraged by President Trump’s ban from Twitter and
Facebook; many Democrats believe that digital platforms have tolerated
and even encouraged the dissemination of right-wing misinformation.
These concerns have contributed to a growing belief that Big Tech is too
powerful and unaccountable. In October 2020, the US House of Representatives’ antitrust subcommittee
proposed the potential break-up of some firms. Both Republican and
Democratic subcommittee members agreed that tech giants had
acted anti-competitively.
In the meantime, competition
authorities and policy-makers elsewhere have taken up the case against
Big Tech. Regulators in Australia, Japan, Mexico and India have
conducted studies critical of large digital platforms. Chinese
authorities have also begun taking action against the country’s own
large digital firms.
Despite the growing global consensus, few
countries have yet formulated precise proposals to address the problem.
President Biden has appointed antitrust scholars renowned for their
criticisms of Big Tech to his administration, but a detailed policy is
yet to emerge. Competition authorities around the world have launched
antitrust proceedings, but these will be case-specific. The UK has well-developed thinking, but not yet published draft legislation for its proposed regulatory framework.
The
European Commission is therefore leading the world, having drafted a
Digital Markets Act (DMA). The DMA would set a rulebook for the largest
tech firms, requiring them to change their business models in various
ways. The rules are intended to ensure fairness for businesses which
rely on the largest tech firms, and also intend to give potential
competitors more chance of success.
Several
aspects of the DMA suggest the Commission wants to introduce it
quickly, ensuring that the law is implemented before other jurisdictions
have finalised their own proposals. First, the Commission wants the DMA
to come into force in 2022 – an ambitious timetable by EU standards.
Second, the Commission has designed a streamlined process for
identifying the digital platforms (referred to as ‘gatekeepers’) which
will need to follow the new rulebook. The process relies on simple
criteria and tries to avoid detailed analysis. Third, the DMA bypasses
the normal steps used in most models of economic regulation. For
example, the DMA imposes an initial set of rules on all gatekeepers,
without careful analysis and consultation about which are appropriate
for each gatekeeper’s particular business.
The desire for speed is
understandable: the Brussels effect could deliver important benefits
for Europe. If the EU’s regulatory standards were adopted in other
countries, or voluntarily adopted by large technology firms on a global
basis, EU digital businesses could expand globally more easily. They
would know they could rely on the same rights when dealing with large
technology firms outside the EU as they enjoy inside the EU.
The
EU cannot simply act quickly and unilaterally, however, if it wants its
rules to be adopted elsewhere. The proposed rules must be comprehensive
within Europe – the EU must dissuade member-states from ‘supplementing’
the DMA with their own national laws, as Germany has done.
The rules need to produce visible benefits for European consumers or
businesses – and avoid any obvious negative consequences – so that
consumers and lawmakers elsewhere demand the same outcomes. Finally, the
rules need to be cost-effective – so that large technology firms (and
foreign law-makers) see sense in avoiding the costs of operating
different business models in different regions. The EU has not always
achieved these objectives. For example, the Union’s requirement that
payment card companies separate different parts of their businesses
imposed large costs, provided little benefit to competition and failed
to gain global traction. Card companies now operate one business model
in Europe, and a different model in the rest of world.
The DMA is
better than proposals – many, ironically, emanating from the US – which
call for large technology firms to be ‘broken up’. Under the DMA, the
Commission could only break up a firm in extreme cases, after repeated
non-compliance. This reasonable approach should make the DMA more
acceptable to mainstream political thought in the US and elsewhere.
Other parts of the DMA, however, could cause conspicuous harm to
consumers and reduce competition. For example, many consumers value
Apple’s tight control over which apps run on iPhones, and consider that
this control delivers greater security; consumers are free to choose a
more ‘open’ ecosystem on Google’s Android phones. The DMA could force
Apple to relinquish this control. That would remove an important
competitive differentiator between Google and Apple’s businesses. Other
countries might not accept a regulatory approach which limited consumer
choice in that way. Apple would probably limit its compliance to Europe,
rather than voluntarily changing its business model on a global scale.
MEPs should therefore add more flexibility to the DMA’s rules to avoid
this.
Some
MEPs are also proposing to restrict the DMA’s application to just a
handful of gatekeepers. This would be double-edged: such changes would
make the DMA more targeted, but also risk ensuring that the only
gatekeepers were American – an outcome which could reignite
transatlantic tensions, and therefore make other countries less willing
to follow the EU. The EU could more easily justify all gatekeepers being
American if the DMA focused on one category of business, such as
Facebook and Google’s digital advertising; that would look more
reasonable that regulating a larger number of firms which all happen to
be American. That would also bring the DMA closer to the UK’s approach,
which would have other advantages: the UK has a significantly larger number of successful digital businesses
than the EU, so if new regulation delivers benefits to digital
businesses, those benefits might be readily observable in the UK.
Foreign – especially American – lawmakers might be more easily persuaded
to copy the EU’s rulebook if the UK and EU were already aligned.
The
Commission has the opportunity to set a global standard that works for
Europe. But care, not just speed, is necessary to prepare a rulebook
that other countries will follow.
Zach Meyers is a research fellow at the Centre for European Reform.
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