Title: Economie des rseaux, Economie de lInternet
1Economie des réseaux, Economie de lInternet
- Nicolas Curien
- Ecole dété du GDR STIC
- 5 Septembre 2005
2Deux Sujets Complémentaires
- Economie des réseaux étude du système
concurrence-régulation dans les secteurs en
réseau sujet déconomie industrielle - Economie de lInternet étude de limpact des
réseaux et services de communication électronique
sur léconomie et la société sujet de
prospective interdisciplinaire.
3Quest-ce quun Réseau ?
- Réseau interconnexion (ingénieur) vs Réseau
intermédiation (économiste) - Morphologie en couches infrastructure,
infostructure et services - Critères de reconnaissance
- Effets de club
- Synergies de coûts
- Subventions croisées
- Partage monopole / marché
- Dispositifs de régulation
4Réseaux, Clubs de Consommation
- Biens réseaux et biens-systèmes
- Modélisation des effets de club effet de masse
critique - Dynamique de croissance dun réseau (Ex. Le
téléphone en France) - Guerres de réseaux émergence dun standard
- Modèles de diffusion technologique (déterministes
et évolutionnistes)
5Réseaux, Systèmes de Production
- Synergies de coûts effets déchelle,
denvergure, de réseau - Théories du monopole naturel et de la
contestabilité - Régulation des facilités essentielles en
présence dasymétries dinformation - Tarifications de second rang en présence
dexternalités de club et de contraintes de
capacité - Subventions croisées et soutenabilité
6Réseaux, Concurrence et Régulation
- Couches morphologiques et concurrence Cône
douverture du marché - 3 Axes de la déréglementation
- Libéralisation du marché
- Evolution de la régulation
- Evolution de lopérateur historique
- Matrice Marché x Régulation
- Régulation sectorielle vs Droit de la
concurrence, dynamique de la régulation
7Chantiers de la Régulation
- Licences et autorisations soumission
comparative vs enchères (UMTS, BLR) - Interconnexion (téléphone) ECPR / CMILT
- Accès (haut débit) Modèle de léchelle des
investissements - Service public et service universel Modèles
dévaluation de coût - Processus dAnalyse des marchés la matrice
Services x Marchés
8Dun Sujet to Another Topic
- Au delà de léconomie interne des réseaux et
services de communication électroniques . - What are the expected impact of their diffusion
on economic and social mechanisms ? - From Internet as a Network to Internet as a
Laboratory
9Sketchy Overview
- The utopia of the New Economy (1995-2000)
misinterpreted the actual consequences of the
Digital Revolution . - The economic value will originate in
knowledge rather than in information .
Knowledge economy society is much better a
phrasing than Information economy society. - After Solows productivity paradox (1980), a
second paradox now arises the knowledge economy
will be a hybrid one, gathering both features of
a market economy and of a public economy . - Online Communities constitute the key informal
institution of the knowledge economy.
102 Key-Drivers of the Digital Revolution
- Digitalization of information
- Cultural goods (books, music, movies)
- Software
- Video-games
- Information intensive goods
- Experience goods
- Attention goods
- Complex goods
- Innovating goods
112 Major Economic Impacts
- The emergence of the informational commons
- Information becomes a non-rival good,
- despite of the current industrial and
governmental attempts to protect non rival but at
least partially excludable contents
(eradication of P2P seemingly to protect property
rights. and mostly to protect unduly the
business of majors). - The request for meta-information
- In a complexified space of goods and services,
economic agents need higher compentecies - more off-market and/or off-hierarchy
information is necessary in order to supply, to
innovate or to consume.
12The mistakings of the New Economy
- The initial simplistic and utopic view
- ICTs will tend to make
- markets more fluid (B2B B2C aiming at a perfect
market), - hierarchies more controlable (aiming at a perfect
bureaucracy), - thus
- generating increased efficiency and productivity
gains, - without major changes in the organisation of
economy, except for welfare improvement. - What really occurs
- more segmented markets,
- flatter hierarchies with more elastic and
permeable frontiers, - in depth transformation of many business models
(especially contents industries and information
intensive industries), - Schumpeterian destructive creation making the
assessment of welfare impacts uneasy.
13 Economy of Knowledge
- Codified information is a free input rather
than a valuable output - digitalization indeed creates value as it
generates productivity gains, - but as digitalized information becomes a non
rival good supplied at almost zero marginal cost, - then optimal price approaches zero, so that
economic value no longer can be collected at this
stage. - A new type of scarcity originates in the
tacit information necessary for - matching supply and demand (info-mediation,
Hayekian market), - coupling innovation to usersneeds (as in
open-source), - transforming information into knowledge at both
the individual level (learning process) and the
supra-individual level (generation of management
routines).
143 Main Characteristics
- Open model
- Producers and consumers participate in the same
social algorithm , - where info-mediation replaces the traditional
direct hierarchy / market interface, - the consumer becoming active as a tester or even
as a co-producer, - which leads to a better fit of rational
production and hedonic consumption - in a world of fast innovation.
- Circulating goods
- The repeated usage of informational goods does
not destroy but creates value, - so that the free circulation of those goods
benefits the collectivity, - that circulation being globally by itself a non
rival asset, - even if some of the circulating goods
individually are (or could be made) rival (just
as the Kula objects exchanged by Papouasian
tribes). - Consumption spillovers
- Consumers benefit from critics and advices
supplied by other consumers, - ex ante when making buy decicions,
- ex post when learning how to use goods.
15After Solow a 2nd Paradox
- Considered as a technological neutral
platform - ICTs seem to reinforce the market economy and
world-wide competition, - by enhancing transparency, universality,
flexibility, fluidity of transactions. - Considered as the vector of the digitalization of
contents - ICTs generate the typical characteristics of a
public economy , such as - strong economies of scale (fixed cost economy),
- powerful club effects (created by electronic
networks and standards), - informational commons .
- favouring concentration (Microsoft) and/or
cooperation (RD, B2B monopsonies), rather than
unrestricted competition (model of
coopetition ). - The actual new economy will be a hybrid
economy , - mixing the features of the two opposite models
(dialectic rather than dichotomic evolution!), - relying upon an original kind of informal
institutional framework online communities
(OCs).
16Online Communities (OCs)
- OCs are endogenous , spontaneous and informal
institutions generating a new model of
inter-individual interaction which extends the
traditional models of social networks (SNs) and
mass medias (MMs), and partially substitute to
those. - OCs are of various types
- Practice OCs (final markets, ex post)
- Experience OCs (final markets, ex ante)
- Epistemic OCs (innovation)
- Inter-firm and professional OCs (intermediary
markets) - Intra-firm OCs (hierarchies)
- However OCs share common features that oppose
them to both MMs and SNs.
173 Infomediation Structures
- Social Networks (SNs)
- Information circulates along a spatialized graph
structure showing vicinity links, distant links
and clusters. - Strength of weak links ( small world according
to Granovetter) - Attempts to densify SNs through selective (or
even secret ). communities (civil servants
corporations in France, macons). - Mass Medias (MMs)
- One way information flow (point to many) or
two-step flow (MM SN) - Poor differenciation of messages (narrow
selection of products). - Almost no feedback (except for statistical
information about audience). - Online Communities (OCs)
- Almost no direct inter-individual relationships
accross participants. - Indirect relationships through the informational
corpus ( blackboard ). - Reverse free-riding writing on the
blackboard exceeds reading , requesting
quality rating.
18Infomediation Graphs
193 Types of Social Link
- Social Networks (SNs)
- Symmetric roles of agents
- Long run intimacy
- Links do survive temporary inactivity
- Tacit reciprocal obligations
- Separate networks depending on the context (work
/ home) - Mass Medias (MMs)
- Strongly asymmetric roles of the source and the
audience - Short run and/or fictitious intimacy (star / fan)
- Transfer of attention (TV programs attract
audience for advertisement) - Online Communities (OCs)
- Complementary dedicated roles authors or
innovators /experts / novices - Instrumental intimacy (ephemerous personalized)
- Asynchronous relationships mediated through the
blackboard - Durable but fragile link to the blackboard
20Instrumental Intimacy
21From Code to Semantics
- In both cases of social networks (SNs) and mass
medias (MMs), information may be considered as a
signal - Meaning of the message is rather easy to decode,
whereas trust in its truth and authenticity is at
stake. - Signalling is a natural (innate) phenomenon
(ecology) - The economics of information is Shannonian as
it treats information as a coded signal
(principal/agent model, perfect bayesian
equilibria in game theory) - In the case of Online Communities (OCs),
information acquires a semantic dimension as in a
language - Trust is not a major issue (it may be solved
endogeneously), whereas the very meaning of
messages is costly to decode (because of fuzzy
formulation). - Language is an artificial (acquired)
construct. - The coding is ambiguous and of a symbolic type
(links between objects rather than objects
themselves are encoded, Savage Thinking, Levi
Strauss). - Meta-representation (especially representation of
others ignorance) is essential to the
interactive process of collaborative construction
of sense.
22Comparative Performances of OCs, SNs and MMs
- Hierarchies and intermediary markets (OCs vs.
SNs) - Better decentralization of decisions (through
information circulation at the lowest level) ? - Better coupling accross hierarchies (Do OCs
perform better than inter-personnal networks) ? - Final markets (OCs vs MMs SNs)
- Impact on competition and product differenciation
(same degree of competition with higher
diffenrenciation) ? - Better consumption of experience goods ?
- Better learning of how to use complex goods ?
- Better innovation through interactive interplay
of innovators and users ?
23Brief Summary
- Final markets are more and more assisted
(self-regulated) by experience OCs, that tend to
substitute for MMs and to extend SNs (word of
mouth). - Hierarchies and intermediary markets are more and
more challenged by work-practice OCs and
transversal professional OCs, that tend to move
the firms boundary and alter the control of
proprietary knowledge. - The consumers production function (Lancaster
model) develops, thus transforming the final
market into an intermediary market and requesting
the emergence of domestic-practice OCs. - Despite of their diversity (experience, practice,
epistemic, files sharing, etc.), OCs are the
meeting point of rationalized production and
savage consumption (in Levi Strauss
understanding of the term). - The different types of OCs do share a same
pattern of original features, in terms of
structure and mechanisms, that oppose them to
both SNs and MMs and raises the delicate issue of
performance assessment. - OCs are a new informal institution at the core of
the K-economy society.