Just about every paper
today is reporting on the story of how Google is apparently a monopoly that
may need to be regulated and broken up to allow further competition. This
is a big mistake by the European commission, and sadly rather
typical of institutions that don't understand monopolies and how widespread
value is created through economic power laws (the three newspaper articles I
read today don't do much better).
First things first. How
can you tell when there is a natural monopoly? That's a serious question -
before you complain about monopoly power, you first have to establish that there
is a monopoly, then if there is, explain why there is one. Because even if there is one, you'll
find there are often many good reasons for monopolies or for dominating firms
in particular industries.
One of the main areas of
enquiry when there appears to be a monopoly is to ask whether there are good
alternatives for consumers, and if so why aren't they being consumed, and if
not, why not? And by 'monopoly' we could just mean having the lion's share of
the market. For example, suppose Domino's has the lion's share of the pizza
market. If consumers think Pizza Hut, Papa John's and other pizza places are a
good substitute for Domino's then there is healthy competition. If they don't,
despite competing firms, then Domino's are probably providing the kind of pizza
(or the kind of price) that a significantly large number of people like.
Now the only way to
determine whether competitors are a close alternative is to examine the
elasticity of demand. If there is elasticity of demand then if Domino's raises
its prices then a lot of pizza eaters will switch to Pizza Hut or Papa John's.
If, however, the elasticity is negligible then more pizza eaters will stick with
Domino's.
The thing
we hate about monopolies is that they are predominant forces that stifle competition
- which is bad because it is competition that brings the most significant
progress for people in society. If you have a monopoly on a good or service
there is no selection pressure to improve and innovate, as consumers have
nowhere else to go as an alternative. But with competition, providers are
continually looking to improve products, innovate to offer something new, and
retain competitive prices too.
Incidentally,
I can't help but point out the irony here because the people that most qualify
as being monopolistic forces that stifle competition and progress are
governments that choose to put industries into public ownership. They are the
most unassailable monopolies of all.
What Google has, just like
Facebook and Amazon, is not an unassailable monopoly - it is the possession of
the lion's share of innovation and value-creation in its particular sphere of market value. Digital
powerhouses, similar to supermarket, electricity, water and railway providers,
have the lion's share of industry control not through unfair monopoly power or
competition-starving cartels, but because it takes a high level of start-up costs,
investment and infrastructure to provide large-scale, high quality services at that level.
Not only do companies like
Google, Facebook and Amazon control the lion's share of their particular niche
industry, the demand for their services has grown so large precisely because
they've created or helped create the market for these services people value,
and lest we forget, at a cost lower than their competitors.
There is nothing stopping
competing firms coming in to challenge - but if they cannot challenge Google in
terms of its efficiency of output then there's no reason why anyone should be
concerned about their market size. Obviously if any firm became so enlarged
that they used their dominance for ignoble means then of course we should be
concerned and look to intervene. But if there's no sign of that happening - and
Google, Facebook and Amazon are simply doing what they do really well, and
providing mass value in doing so - who is anybody to complain about that?
Moreover, because Google, Facebook
and Amazon don't have an unassailable monopoly in terms of shutting out
competition, it is therefore highly unlikely that they would do anything that
would be to the detriment of consumers. How ironic, then, that an actual monopoly
force like the European commission wants to break them up in an attempt to make
the industry more efficient, when one of the main reasons those industries like
Google, Facebook and Amazon are so far ahead of their competitors is because they have dominated the sectors through
predominant efficiency.
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