克服信息共享的障碍

Amitai Aviram, Avishalom Tor
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引用次数: 31

摘要

在决定是否共享信息时,企业会考虑自己的私人福利。社会福利和私人福利之间的差异可能导致企业过度分享信息,以达到反竞争的目的——促进卡特尔和其他有害的横向做法——这是反垄断研究和判例法都非常关注的问题。另一方面,法律学者很少关注竞争对手之间信息共享效率低下的另一种类型,即次优信息共享问题。这种现象会产生巨大的社会成本,在网络行业中尤为重要,因为保持兼容性是产生积极网络效应的关键,通常需要信息共享。了解迄今为止被忽视的次优信息共享的影响不仅对反垄断法的许多领域很重要,而且对于更普遍地制定针对网络行业和关键基础设施的有效政策,以及改进涉及诉讼各方之间信息交换的程序规则也很重要。因此,本文在许多重要方面推进了对有效信息共享障碍的法律分析:首先,它表明竞争对手的战略行为可能会对信息共享设置经济障碍,这在以前的文献中没有得到解决-对退化的恐惧。这种形式的战略行为包括战略性地拒绝分享信息,这种拒绝对竞争对手造成的伤害大于对自己造成的伤害,从而产生竞争优势。其次,本文揭示了一组迄今为止尚未认识到的信息共享行为障碍,其中竞争规范和管理者的风险态度影响了竞争者对信息共享前景的判断,而现状偏见和模糊性厌恶导致这些决策者避免这种安排。第三,它将这些经济和行为见解与现有文献的发现结合起来,创建了一个新的框架,用于预测私人信息共享何时将是次优的。最后,基于本文开发的框架,我们提出了如何促进私人信息共享与社会最优性的一致性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Overcoming Impediments to Information Sharing
When deciding whether to share information, firms consider their private welfare. Discrepancies between social and private welfare may lead firms excessively to share information to anti-competitive ends - in facilitating of cartels and other harmful horizontal practices - a problem both antitrust scholarship and case law have paid much attention to. On the other hand, legal scholars have paid far less attention to the opposite type of inefficiency in information sharing among competitors - namely, the problem of sub-optimal information sharing. This phenomenon can generate significant social costs and is of special importance in network industries because the maintenance of compatibility, a key to producing positive network effects, typically requires information sharing. Understanding the hitherto neglected impact of sub-optimal information sharing is important not only for many areas of antitrust law, but also for developing effective policies towards network industries and critical infrastructures more generally, as well as for improving those procedural rules that concern information exchange among litigating parties. This paper therefore advances the legal analysis of impediments to efficient information sharing in a number of significant ways: First, it shows that the strategic behavior of competitors may erect an economic barrier to information sharing that has not been previously addressed in the literature - the fear of degradation. This form of strategic behavior involves the strategic refusal to share information when the refusal inflicts a greater harm on one's rivals than on oneself, and thus generates a competitive advantage. Second, the paper reveals a hitherto unrecognized set of behavioral impediments to information sharing, wherein rivalry norms and managers' risk attitudes bias competitors' judgments of the prospects of information sharing and the status-quo bias and ambiguity aversion lead these decision makers to avoid such arrangements. Third, it integrates these economic and behavioral insights with the findings of the extant literature to create a new framework for predicting when private information sharing will be suboptimal. Finally, we suggest how the alignment of private information sharing with social optimality may be promoted, based on the framework developed here.
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