Eakinomics: 50
First Mistakes
These days everyone seems to want a piece of the tech giants Google, Facebook,
Apple, Amazon, and Netflix. Recently, 50 state attorneys general (AGs)
announced they were opening a sweeping investigation into Google’s
activities. Unfortunately, after reviewing the effort, AAF’s
Will Rinehart finds that “it’s likely that consumers won’t be much better
off after the investigation has concluded.”
Why? To begin, the AGs seem to have gotten off on the wrong
foot. Ken Paxton of Texas, the lead AG on the case, wrote
in The Wall Street
Journal, “Each year more than 90% of Google’s $117 billion in
revenue comes from online advertising. For reference, the entire market
for online advertising is around $130 billion annually.” That
percent seems to suggest a dominant position in online ads, with the
investigation focusing as a result on any abuse of this
near-monopoly position. Unfortunately, the statistics are
misleading. $117 billion is Google’s worldwide ad revenue;
$130 billion is the size of the domestic market. On top of
that, the actual Google market share is just under 40 percent and
falling. According to eMarketer, “Google and Facebook’s
share of new digital ad dollars is declining…. This year, they will
garner nearly 48% of new expenditures. By comparison, that figure was
nearly 73% in 2016.”
But measurement is not the only problem. The AGs may be making
the mistake of defining the market too narrowly; it should be both
advertising and search markets. As Rinehart
explains: “...consider a business with only two sides, users and
advertisers. If users experience an increase in price or a reduction in
quality, then they will use the platform less or leave it completely.
Advertisers see this change in users and react by reducing their demand
for ad placements as well. When advertisers drop out, the total amount of
content also recedes, and users react once again.” In the presence of
these so-called demand interdependences, focusing on ads alone gets the
analysis wrong. As AAF previously pointed out:
[T]he value of both
Facebook and Google comes in creating the platform, which combines users
with advertisers. Before the integration of ad networks, the search
engine industry was struggling and it was simply not a major player in
the Internet ecosystem. In short, the search engines, while convenient,
had no economic value. As Michael Moritz, a major investor of Google,
said of those early years, “We really couldn’t figure out the business
model. There was a period where things were looking pretty bleak.” But
Google didn’t pave the way. Rather, Bill Gross at GoTo.com succeeded in showing
everyone how advertising could work to build a business. Google founders
Larry Page and Sergey Brin merely adopted the model in 2002 and by the
end of the year, the company was profitable for the first time. Marrying
the two sides of the platform created value. Tearing them apart will also
destroy value.
Finally, there is not a lot that states
can do to help consumers. They can fine Google (as the European Union has
done), but that does little for consumers. Or they can try to induce changes
in behavior, but in a market this difficult to characterize, those
actions may ultimately hurt consumers.
An investigation by 50 state AGs will be a nuisance for any tech
company, for sure. But all that nuisance may not add up to an increase in
consumer welfare.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment