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The view from the commons

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The view from the commons What we should and shouldn t take seriously from neoclassical economics, and what would further our understanding of ICT – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The view from the commons


1
The view from the commons
  • What we should and shouldnt take seriously from
    neoclassical economics, and what would further
    our understanding of ICT

2
A loose structure
  • Why economics matters and what I would like it to
    be about
  • Why it isnt as useful to ICT studies as it could
    be
  • Which insights from ICT challenge economics
  • How to think about the economics of ICT

3
Why economics matters1. Economists have influence
  • Business models and therefore corporate strategy,
    investor behaviour, employment practices, etc
  • Law and policy vis. e.g. property rights,
    competition, etc
  • Regulation, standardization, etc

4
Why economics matters2. Respect in academic
circles and not just locally
  • They are a big and powerful academic community
  • Economists ideas and techniques are widely
    disseminated and discussed
  • Neighboring disciplines are amenable, including
    law, political science, sociology and management

5
Why economics matters3. Some vocabulary and
tools we might benefit from
6
Economics is conventionally about production,
distribution consumption
  • Economics is the study of how men and society
    end up choosing, with or without the use of
    money, how to employ scarce productive resources
    which could have alternative uses, to produce
    various commodities and distribute them for
    consumption, now or in the future, among various
    people and groups in society.
  • Samuelson, 1970, p. 4

7
Information
  • Price is the only market indicator necessary for
    most economists
  • Asymmetric information and market equilibrium
    problems (Akerlof)
  • Problems of imperfect information and dynamic
    responses

8
ICT and productivity growth
  • Dale Jorgenson
  • IT and the Am. Growth Resurgence MIT 2005
  • Paul David
  • Endogenous growth and GPT
  • Paul Romer
  • Increasing returns long-run growth
  • Robert Solow
  • With Kuznits most unexplained growth from a
    residual--technical change
  • An originator of the productivity paradox

9
What economics should be about
  • Exchange
  • Including preferences, property, markets and
    their structure and mechanisms of governance
  • Innovation
  • Fundamentally dynamic processes largely
    endogenous to firms, as is their technology
  • Work
  • Including the division of labour, structure of
    firms and industries, productivity
  • Value
  • Not exclusively price

10
A history of (but not a tradition for) more
amenable forms of explanation
  • Marshall, Young and the trajectory before the
    articulation of neo-classicism
  • Penrose on the firm
  • Stigler on the division of labour
  • Coase on transactions
  • Arrow on information
  • March on institutions

11
What ICT studies need from economics
  • Networks
  • Scale and scope
  • Exchange and communication
  • Information, quality and value
  • Innovation and productivity
  • Growth theory

12
Dynamic systems within which technology is
endogenous
  • We need to know better what is endogenous and
    what is not
  • We need a better way of dealing with exogenous
    factors other than to put them in black boxes

13
To describe the exchange relations within
different kinds of networks
  • Network forms and behaviours are not identical
    and the means of exchange within them need to be
    comparable

14
Scale and scope of networks
  • Scale is not an obvious concept (and never has
    been for engineers)
  • Scope is also non-trivial and is fundamentally a
    managerial issue

15
Understanding of infrastructure
  • Hanseth gives us a start, but he neither goes far
    enough nor allows for much use of economic
    concepts
  • We need to know more about the relationships
    among layers of infrastructure

16
Innovation as a feature of systems
  • Innovation is usually seen as a product of
    systems
  • Moores law is misleading, at best!

17
The economic significance of the replication of
institutions
  • What this means in relation to stability (and
    innovation--as vis standards)
  • Significance for growth theory

18
The division of labour that makes sense as a
feature of innovation
  • The productivity debates, and especially
    Jorgensons proposals.

19
How management issues might be understood
  • From firm level to firm level to aggregate
    econometric study of firms

20
Where we can get it from
  • Institutional economics
  • Evolutionary economics
  • Nelson
  • Winter
  • Mowery
  • Economic sociology
  • Neil Fligstein
  • Harrison White
  • Richard Swedberg

21
Where we can get it from (2)
  • Game theory, evolutionary and behavioral game
    theory, etc. (Greif, Dixit, etc.)
  • Ostrum on common pool resources
  • Bowles on economic institutions
  • Yang on new classical economics

22
Where we challenge them
  • Network externalities
  • Scale and scope (and virtuality)
  • Infrastructure as layered relations among
    information and its utilisation (including
    transport)

23
Good ways to think about the economics of ICT
  • Exchange regimes and the commons
  • A means to understand rivalrus and excludable
    characteristics of a wider range of property
    rights
  • How transformations take place dynamically from
    one form of exchange to another
  • Means to improve governance

24
Goals in this analysis include
  • Redefining property rights across a wider range
    of ownership and use categories
  • Articulating the most important characteristics
    of governance
  • Incorporating an understanding of dynamic
    capabilities to operationalize rights

25
Goals (2)
  • Dealing coherently with transformations from one
    form to another, as with the "marketizing" or
    "liberalizing" of monopolies or state controlled
    property rights--and indeed the other way around
    when property rights are taken out of markets and
    brought under state control or monopolized

26
Applications to ICT
  • Pricing
  • Regulation
  • Strategy

27
Problem of vertical integration
  • Efficient vertical integration essential to
    investment
  • Benefits from scale scope are currently
    restricted
  • Vertical integration within ill-formed markets
    fails to provide information on layer-level
    investment
  • How to know layer-level costs
  • Merely accounting costs can be provided
  • Engineering data restricted to given market
    structure
  • Without intermediate markets, economic costs
    mislead
  • Therefore no efficient investment level can be
    known

28
Activities
  • Stigler (1952) why firms do not evolve into
    monopolies (division of labor extent of market)
  • Firms are aggregations of activities, each with
    their own scale scope characteristics
  • Market characteristics emerge from the
    disintegration of the firm
  • Telecoms have been artificially preserved from
    these forces

29
Innovation and intermediate markets
  • Competitive entry is based on innovation
  • Vertical integration constrains entry
  • At great cost to innovation efficiency
  • For both the firm and society

30
Theories of markets, governance and the commons
  • From Hardin to Coase
  • Commons always suffer from the free-rider problem
    (Hardin 1968)
  • Governance matters (Coase 1960)
  • Commons imply neither efficiency nor
    optimization, but many do work

31
Markets are subsets of the commons
  • We define commons to include all economic
    exchange, whether market-based, based upon
    central-planning allocations, or other
    arrangements that could be government and/or
    community based (vis common pool resources
    Ostrom Bowles)

32
The pricing problem
  • No way to create an efficient market for
    rights-of-way or for poles, ducts conduits,
    perhaps even for fiber
  • Impossibility of optimal pricing because of the
    lack of benchmarks
  • All investments above lower levels are distorted
    by this pricing problem

33
The regulator and the managed commons
  • Formulate the problem in terms of the commons
    characteristics of the lowest layers of broadband
  • Dont search for optimal pricing solutions,
    search for governance
  • Better governance involves institutional change
    and new market relations
  • Efficiency of investment in broadband is directly
    related to the efficiency of investment at all
    levels

34
The way forward policy implications
  • Promote information to achieve efficient
    layer-level investment
  • In particular for lower layers
  • Managing the commons a regulatory raison dêtre
  • Rethink allocation mechanisms to consider
    localization features and the diversity of
    property rights
  • Treat lower layers within the commons framework,
    e.g.
  • Forbidding municipal conduits is inefficient
  • Conduit space in streets might be conceptualized
    as vis. fisheries management

35
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