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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Evolutionary Economics Année : 2006

What's the aim for competition policy: optimizing market structure or encouraging innovative behaviors?

Résumé

Innovation is usually thought of as a change in the fundamentals of an economy, which can require adjustments by policy-makers. The latter are usually thought as in regard to a dominant vision, which is to restore an optimal market structure, and leads to a competition policy mainly aimed at controlling for antitrust practices and limiting market power. In this paper, we favor another vision of innovation, as a discovery process that cannot allow ex ante a definition of best practices. Dealing with information issues in two different and alternative perspectives, we argue that antitrust authorities confront a market imperfection–market failure dilemma (MI–MF dilemma) which leads them to favor the existence of appreciative and discretionary policy rather than encouraging the existence of any market structure thought of as optimal as regards the current state of information. We conclude with policy implications, contrasting the EU with the US.

Dates et versions

hal-03417188 , version 1 (05-11-2021)

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Jean-Luc Gaffard, Michel Quéré. What's the aim for competition policy: optimizing market structure or encouraging innovative behaviors?. Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 2006, 16 (1-2), pp.175 - 187. ⟨10.1007/s00191-005-0014-0⟩. ⟨hal-03417188⟩
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