Nicolas Petit, University of Liege, School of Law; International Center for Law & Economics; University of South Australia School of Law, hs published Antitrust and Artificial Intelligence - A Research Agenda. Here is the abstract.
This short paper provides an overview of the claims made in the emerging scholarship on artificial intelligence and antitrust policy. It discusses in particular the conjecture that markets will be rife with algorithmic collusion and extractive personalized pricing. It stresses the main methodological, theoretical and empirical limitations that underpin the claims made in the scholarship, and concludes with a call for evidenced-based antitrust policy.
Download the paper from SSRN at the link.
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.