The Rise of Behavioural Discrimination

Ariel Ezrachi, M. Stucke
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引用次数: 23

Abstract

The ongoing developments in e-commerce, big data and big analytics have transformed our online environment and the way we shop for goods and services. By increasing transparency, access to markets, and by reducing market barriers and our search costs, technological developments promise to lower the prices we pay, increase the selection of goods and services we are offered, and yield greater innovation. Indeed, we all expect to be better off in comparison to past decades when competition was less intense and largely confined to local offering by brick-and-mortar shops.And yet, is it possible that the initial promise of online competitiveness may give way to new dynamics that reduce our welfare? Are we still the winners in this story of innovation, or have we become targets of a new form of discrimination that increasingly extracts our wealth? In the online world, our anonymity and our ability to identify a single competitive price are becoming a thing of the past. Virtual competition heralds the age of personalisation with its benefits, and possible pitfalls. As a White House report summarized: “[s]ellers are now using big data and digital technology to explore consumer demand, to steer consumers towards particular products, to create targeted advertising and marketing offers, and in a more limited and experimental fashion, to set personalized prices.” Our article explores how e-commerce and the personalisation of our online environment can give rise to behavioural discrimination, a durable, more pernicious form of price discrimination. Online behavioural discrimination, as we explore, will likely differ from the price discrimination we have seen in the brick-and-mortar retail world in several important respects: First is the shift from third-degree, imperfect price discrimination to near perfect price discrimination; second is the overall increase in consumption as the demand curve shifts to the right; and third is the durability of behavioural discrimination. In Part I we consider the online shift from imperfect price discrimination to near perfect, or first-degree, price discrimination. We explore how online sellers, in tracking us, collecting data about us, and segmenting us into smaller groups can better identify our reservation price.Part II explores how sellers can use Big Data to target us with the right emotional pitch to increase overall consumption. Part III discusses how, as more online retailers personalize pricing and product offerings, it will be harder for consumers to discover a general market price and to assess their outside options. Personalisation and data-driven network effects can make behavioural discrimination more durable. Given the differences between price discrimination of yesteryear and online behavioural discrimination, Part IV examines whether we should treat the latter with the same indifference that we have treated price discrimination, or does it merit a fresh look?
行为歧视的兴起
电子商务、大数据和大分析的持续发展已经改变了我们的在线环境以及我们购买商品和服务的方式。通过提高透明度和市场准入,通过减少市场壁垒和我们的搜索成本,技术发展有望降低我们支付的价格,增加我们所能获得的商品和服务的选择,并产生更大的创新。事实上,与过去几十年的竞争不那么激烈、主要局限于实体店在当地提供产品的情况相比,我们都希望自己的生活更好。然而,网络竞争力的最初承诺可能会让位于减少我们福利的新动态吗?我们仍然是这个创新故事的赢家吗?还是我们已经成为一种日益榨取我们财富的新形式歧视的目标?在网络世界,我们的匿名性和识别单一竞争价格的能力正在成为过去。虚拟竞争预示着个性化时代的到来,它带来了好处,也可能带来隐患。正如白宫的一份报告所总结的那样:“商家现在正在利用大数据和数字技术来探索消费者需求,引导消费者购买特定产品,制作有针对性的广告和营销服务,并以一种更有限和实验性的方式,设定个性化的价格。”我们的文章探讨了电子商务和网络环境的个性化如何导致行为歧视,这是一种持久的、更有害的价格歧视形式。正如我们所探讨的,在线行为歧视可能与我们在实体零售世界中看到的价格歧视在几个重要方面有所不同:首先是从第三度、不完美的价格歧视转变为近乎完美的价格歧视;二是需求曲线右移时消费的总体增长;第三是行为歧视的持久性。在第一部分中,我们考虑了从不完美的价格歧视到近乎完美的价格歧视或一级价格歧视的在线转变。我们探索在线卖家如何跟踪我们,收集我们的数据,并将我们分成更小的群体,从而更好地确定我们的预订价格。第二部分探讨了卖家如何利用大数据以正确的情感基调来瞄准我们,从而增加整体消费。第三部分讨论了随着越来越多的在线零售商个性化定价和产品供应,消费者发现一般市场价格和评估他们的外部选择将变得更加困难。个性化和数据驱动的网络效应可以使行为歧视更加持久。鉴于过去的价格歧视与网络行为歧视之间的差异,第四部分探讨了我们是否应该像对待价格歧视一样漠不关心地对待后者,或者它是否值得我们重新审视?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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