European University Institute Library

How to measure privacy-related consumer harm in merger analysis?, a critical reassessment of the EU Commission’s merger control in data-driven markets, Elias Deutscher

Label
How to measure privacy-related consumer harm in merger analysis?, a critical reassessment of the EU Commission’s merger control in data-driven markets, Elias Deutscher
Language
eng
Abstract
This study contributes to the current debate on how privacy concerns can and should be integrated into merger analysis. First, I contend that while competition authorities increasingly account for the role of personal data as a source of market power and entry barriers, privacy-related consumer harm still remains a blind spot in merger analysis. Second, I discuss how this analytical gap can be filled by mapping out three potential theories of privacy-related consumer harm: namely, privacy as an element of product quality, privacy as a feature of consumer choice, and privacy as non-monetary price. Third, and this is my major claim and contribution, this study proposes willingness-to-pay studies in the form of conjoint analysis as a methodology that enables competition authorities to quantify privacy-related consumer harm in monetary terms. In a fourth section, this study discusses potential objections to this approach. In so doing, it shows that the widespread opposition against the incorporation of privacy into merger analysis is based on a ‘privacy fallacy’. This ‘privacy fallacy’ derives from the erroneous assumption that deteriorations in the level of privacy protection as a consequence of a merger automatically amount to a breach of data-protection rules which should be addressed by data protection authorities, but which do not constitute an antitrust concern
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
How to measure privacy-related consumer harm in merger analysis?
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionariesbibliography
Oclc number
1088504688
Responsibility statement
Elias Deutscher
Series statement
EUI working papers. LAW, 2018/13EUI papers
Sub title
a critical reassessment of the EU Commission’s merger control in data-driven markets
Content
Mapped to

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