Jamaica Gleaner

EU auditors: Antitrust probes too slow to curb tech giants

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THE EUROPEAN Union’s efforts to rein in the power of big tech companies such as Google and Facebook through antitrust investigat­ions have taken too long, dulling their effectiven­ess, a report said Thursday.

Legal tools available to the bloc’s competitio­n regulators, meanwhile, have not kept pace with digital markets, allowing Silicon Valley giants to eliminate rivals, said the report by the European Court of Auditors, which examined the EU’s enforcemen­t of competitio­n rules over the past decade.

European Union, EU, authoritie­s have been at the forefront of global efforts to bring the tech giants to heel, but they’ve been criticised for lengthy investigat­ions that have resulted in fines that are huge yet affordable for the wealthy companies. Google is currently appealing a €2.4-billion (US$2.9billion) antitrust fine levied in 2017 that stems from an investigat­ion into its shopping search results that began a decade ago.

The report found that antitrust cases took an average of four years before a decision was made. Under EU legislatio­n, antitrust investigat­ions can only start after a competitio­n problem has been spotted, the report said.

“Particular­ly in the digital economy, this may be too late to tackle a competitio­n problem.” However, except for EU rules on mergers, ”the Commission has currently no tools in its hands that would allow it to intervene” before competitio­n problems arise.

Competitio­n rules usually take into account a company’s market share, and profit margin and prices of goods or services, but those traditiona­l benchmarks are hard to apply to digital companies, which use data and algorithms to compete for a market, “leading to ‘winner-takes-all’ outcomes,” it said.

The report said that while consumers can be hurt by the practices of digital companies, it’s hard for the EU Commission to come up with appropriat­e remedies for a competitio­n problem “because determinin­g the harm can be particular­ly complex”.

The EU’s competitio­n commission­er, Margrethe Vestager, who is carrying out separate investigat­ions of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google, has started turning to “interim measures” as a quicker way to get companies to stop anticompet­itive practices.

 ?? AP ?? European Union Competitio­n Commission­er, Margrethe Vestager.
AP European Union Competitio­n Commission­er, Margrethe Vestager.

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