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Self-organizing
Systems in the Information Age (Will the Economics of the Information
Age Foster More Monopolies and Should Anyone Care?)
Professor
William Murphy
Franklin Pierce Law Center
Concord, NH 03301
USA
email: murphy@post.harvard.edu
Ever
since Darwin the notion of self-organizing systems in biology has
gained nearly universal acceptance(1). In biological terms a self-organizing
system, like a flock of Canadian geese flying in perfect unison
or school of fish darting and weaving among the coral as one, unites
the disparate, independent actions of individuals into a complex
and coherent whole without centralized command and control. The
individuals, following simple "rules", develop structures and behaviors
that were not those necessarily intended by the individuals.
In
human society we often insist that "someone" or "something" must
be controlling and directing the organization and operation of orderly,
complex, and interacting systems(2). But recently an awareness of
how decentralized systems can also form orderly, complex aggregations
and interactions without centralized command and control has emerged;
first in biology(3) , now in economics(4) and even in the production
of digital domains(5).
The reason that free market capitalism has thrived is that it self-organizes
to produce, at least in comparison to alternatives, beneficial results(6).
In the industrial age economy, the decentralized ideal of the capitalist
model works, for the most part, because when individuals, pursuing
selfish interests (like the goose seeking an easier flying burden),
interact freely in the marketplace the resulting complex and ordered
system produces benefits that exceed its costs. On ethical rather
than economic terms, this self-organizing free market satisfies
three moral criteria:
- justice (distributional
justice under the capitalist criterion whereby each receives according
to contribution and according to voluntary bargained-for exchange),
- rights (right
of free consent, voluntary exchange, and freedom of choice), and
- utility
(resources are allocated, used and distributed efficiently).
There
is little doubt that a truly free market economy is a self-organizing
system. By following the simple rules of individual self-interest
the collective interactions in the free market produce a dynamic
and complex economy that answers the four basic economic decisions(7)
in a manner superior to command and control systems. Many have argued(8)
that the internet should be left alone, and that a rough and tumble
free market will produce that best outcomes in terms of efficiency
and consumer benefits. The operation of the free market in the industrial
age has had this effect so why not apply the hard-won lessons of
the industrial age to the information age?
Potential
for Self-Organizing Monopolies
The question that the paper will discuss is whether the economic
environment that is emerging in the information age is sufficiently
different from that which prevails in most of the industrial age
sectors, that the same self-interested behavior by individuals and
organizations, will lead to undesired consequences or structures
where the long-term benefits might be outweighed by the costs and
burdens(9). Specifically, is the environment of the internet such
that the activities of individuals and organizations will self-organize
into monopolistic structures? The paper will examines six separate
but often interrelated factors that are found in many business sectors
that are emerging in the information age economy. When one or more
of the first five factors examined are present in sufficient strength
it is suggested that there is the danger of self-organizing monopolistic
structures, while the sixth factor examined may have a mitigating
effect(10).
The
Six Factors to be Examined
1.
Scale economy effects
In the high-tech economy of the information age the ratios between
fixed costs and variable costs have changed for many products. Now
the percentage of fixed costs to variable costs can greatly exceed
those common during the industrial age. Because of the high fixed
costs associated with the development, production and distribution
of many information age items relative to their variable costs,
economies of scale are even more important today than in the industrial
age and can lead to industry structures where a single firm can
dominate a market by exploiting a scale economy derived cost advantage(11).
2.
Learning/experience effects
Learning curve and experience curve effects express the mathematical
relationship between the accumulated output of a product at the
unit costs of the product. The effects are thought to be underlying
natural characteristics of organized activity and have long been
observed in industrial age industries(12). The relationship is generally
expressed in terms of a percentage decline in cost for each doubling
of output. For most standardized manufacturing industries cost declines
of 10 to 30% are common(13). It has been suggested that learning
curve effects are even more pronounced in knowledge and technology
intensive industries(14). In addition, many information age products
have extremely low (or potentially no) marginal costs so accumulation
of output can be accomplished at little or no expense(15). To the
extent that learning curve or experience curve effects play a significant
role in information age industries there is a marked tendency to
favor the first mover, the company that is able to accumulate output
quickly(16).
3.
Superstar effects
Superstar effects(17) are related to the scale economy effects but
differ in important aspects. In times past there were limits on
the capacity of individuals or firms to satisfy the demand for their
products or services. As a consequence, after the capacity of the
most desired supplier had been reached customers would, of necessity,
turn to their second best choice. This excess of demand over supply
would also have the effect of permitting the suppliers of the preferred
product or service to charge a higher price. This again would have
the effect of customers shifting to their lower-tiered choices.
Unlike scale economies and learning curve effects, superstar effects
are based on specific consumer preference (other than favorable
prices which can result from the scale and learning effects) for
the perceived "best" product. As a consequence, the fact that a
winner-take-all marketplace may arise due to superstar effects may
not necessarily be bad for the consumer since in such a winner-take-all
marketplace each consumer can have the most desired product or service
and need not settle for second or third choices(18).
4.
Network Effects and Standardization
Network effects or network externalities(19) exist when the amount
that one is willing to pay for access to the network is dependent
upon how many other parties are also connected to the network(20).
Network products or services become more valuable as their use becomes
more widespread(21). In a related manner standards are often required
to allow the efficient functioning of a network. As a consequence,
achieving a critical mass of acceptance is significant in a number
of information age markets. The first firm to achieve a critical
mass of acceptance sets the de facto standard, and success then
breeds more success. When a critical mass is reached on a standard,
the beneficiary of the standard receives increasing benefits as
more and more individuals switch to the dominant standard, which
as a result increases the standard-setter's dominance(22). The importance
of first mover advantages may go beyond critical mass of acceptance.
First movers will also be farther down the learning curve, and may
enjoy greater scale economies(23).
5.
Information Search and Retrieval Burdens
The fifth factor contributing to self-organizing monopolistic structures
in the information age focuses on the burdens of information search
and retrieval. This stems from two causes. First is the complexity
of the products and services. The informational asymmetry between
buyers and sellers is magnified in technology driven markets. Individual
consumers are often ill-equipped to comprehend the salient technological
features of competing products and system. As result, consumers
place increased reliance on reputation and prior experience to make
judgments. A type of herd behavior can evolve, further entrenching
market leaders. It is safer to stay with the grazing herd, even
if the herd is grazing in a sub-optimal area. The second cause of
the information search and retrieval burden is a direct by-product
of the information age. The increasing amount of information available
can overwhelm even the most conscientious consumer(24).
6.
Non-rivalry and Reproduction Costs
Like Pandora's box the story ends with one new factor of the information
age economy that may provide a ray of hope against self-organizing
monopolistic structures, although this characteristic poses ethical
and economic dilemma of its own. One of the fundamental characteristics
of tangible property in the industrial age economy is that possession
is rivalrous. When the possibility of non-rivalrous possession is
coupled with the costs of reproduction a serious problem arises.
In the industrial age economy social welfare was maximized because
consumers were willing to pay a price for tangible goods that was
greater than the marginal cost of producing another copy. It was
unlikely that you were going to cheaply "clone a copy of your Ford"
for a friend. The marginal cost of reproduction (often near zero)
for many digital goods is below the marginal cost of producing and
distributing the product. Will anyone have an incentive to produce
digital goods where the costs of production and distribution exceed
the marginal cost of reproduction? If the answer is no, all of society
will be worse off. The producers of digital goods have begun to
attack the situation by trying to increase the marginal costs of
reproduction through the threat of legal prosecution for infringement
or through technological changes (such as digi-marking)(25).
Ethical and Ecoonomical Considerations
The self-organized monopolies that may arise in the information
age economy appear to pose an ethical and regulatory dilemma that
was not present in the industrial age economy(26). As noted in the
beginning the industrial age economy satisfies three moral criteria(27).
The potential winner-take-all nature of the many information markets
can cause a disassociation between these three moral criteria(28).
Distributional justice may be threatened in that rewards may exceed
one's contribution. In addition, individual rights of choice may
be limited by the absence of competitive alternatives. On the other
hand, one could argue that utility is actually enhanced as costs
are driven to their lowest levels. Of course, low costs do not guarantee
low prices, so the benefits of the effects listed above may be captured
and internalized by the producers rather than shared with the consumers.
The
possibility for self-organizing monopolies to evolve in these winner-take-all
markets also makes them extremely attractive because of their potential
remuneration for the winners. As a result participants can become
engaged in an expensive "arms race" to achieve dominance. This type
of competition can result in escalating expenditures that may not
produce any additional security of success since security of success
is relative to the threat(29).
- In the early
1970's Professor Keller at MIT demonstrated that slime mold cells,
a simple life form without specialized cells, formed clusters
or aggregations simply in response to a chemical secreted and
sought by each slime mold cell. This "aggregation without a leader"
is but one example of self-organizing behavior whereby complex
structures emerge as the result of simple interaction "rules"
followed by free acting individual organisms. [These experiments
were conducted by Evelyn Fox Keller, a professor of mathematics
and humanities whose work has been in mathematical biology and
in the history, philosophy, and psychology of science]
- Although
the self-organizing nature of biological systems is widely accepted
(as noted earlier) there are some who hold to a command and control
explanation of biology. This disagreement is at the core of the
creationism debate. Our tendency to centralized control explanations
may also help explain the persistence and popularity of conspiracy
theories. See also, Michale Resnick, Changing the Centralized
Mind, Technology Review, July 1994.
- Benno Hess
and Alexander Mikhailov, Self-organization in living cells,
Science (4/8/94) at 223. Howard T. Odum, Self-organization,
transformity, and information, Science (11/25/88) at 1132.
- Larry D.
Browning Janice M. Beyer Judy C. Shetler, Building cooperation
in a competitive industry: SEMATECH and the semiconductor
industry, 38 Academy of Management Journal 113 (1995); Peter
Nijkamp and Aura Reggiani, Non-linear Evolution of Dynamic
Spatial Systems: The Relevance of Chaos and Ecologically-Based
Models, 25 Regional Science and Urban Economics (April 1995);
Raghu Garud and Suresh Kotha, Using the Brain as a Metaphor
to Model Flexible Production Systems, 19 Academy of Management
Review 671 (1994); Friedrich Hinterberger, Self-Organizing
Systems, appearing in The Elgar Companion to Austrian Economics,
Peter J. Boettke, ed. (Ashgate, Brookfield, Vt, 1994); and, Michael
J. Radzicki, Institutional Dynamics, Deterministic Chaos, and
Self-Organizing Systems, 24 Journal of Economic Issues (March
1990)
- Michael Rothschild,
Call It Digital Darwinism, Upside, December 1991. 20,000
bytes under the sea, Economist (6/13/98) at 81. See also,
M. C. Yovits and S. Cameron, Eds., Self Organizing Systems
(Pergamon, New York, 1960); H. von Forster and G. W. Zopf,
Eds., Principles of Self-Organization (Pergamon, New York,
1961).
- For a discussion
of this point see A. Michael Froomkin and J. Bradford De Long
The Next Economy? at http://www.law.miami.edu/~froomkin/articles/newecon.htm
- The four
fundamental economic decisions that must be made by a society
are: 1. What products to produce. 2. How much of each to produce.
3. What resources shall be used in producing these products. 4.
Who will get what. Or to express the four in a single sentence
-Who will produce what and how for whom?
- John Perry
Barlow, Selling Wine Without Bottles: The Economy of Mind on
the Global Net, http://www.eff.org/pub/Publications/John_Perry_Barlow/idea_economy.article,
and John Perry Barlow, Stopping the Information Railroad,
Keynote Address, Winter 1994 USENIX Conference, San Francisco,
California, January 17, 1994 at http://www.eff.org/pub/GII_NII/info_railroad_usenix_barlow_eff.speech.
The freedom from control and regulation is often part of the desire
for preservation of the freedom of speech on the internet. See
for example, the web site of Internet Freedom at http://www.netfreedom.org/.
- The fact
that something is different about information age competition,
and the internet in particular, has not escaped notice. According
to one commentator, "Something very unusual is going on here.
É There is something about the information industry in general
and the Internet in particular that makes the application of normal
antitrust rules problematic, whether you approach them from the
point of view of classical antitrust scholarship or of the Chicago
School." Mark A. Lemley, Antitrust and the Internet Standardization
Problem, 28 Conn. L. Rev. 1041 (1996)
- Some authors
have characterized the "new" economics of the information age
as the proliferation of winner-take-all markets. Robert H. Frank
and Philip J. Cook, The Winner-Take-All Society, (Free
Press, 1995)
- For a discussion
of this point and its application see Joseph Kattan, Market
Power in the Presence of an Installed Base, 62 Antitrust L.J.
1 (Summer 1993)
- Wilfred B.
Hirschmann, Profit from the Learning Curve, Harvard Business
Review, January-February 1964. The first documented observation
of the learning curve effect was made in 1925 by the commander
of what is now the Wright-Patterson Air Force base in Ohio.
- Pankaj Ghemawat,
Building Strategy on the Learning Curve, Harvard Business
Review, March-April 1985. The unit cost declines of 10% and 30%
for each doubling of output are generally described as 90% and
70% learning or experience curves, respectively.
- A. Michael
Spence, Competition, Entry, and Antitrust Policy, Strategy,
Predation, and Antitrust Analysis 45, 65-66 (Steven C. Salop ed.,
1981). One way of summing up the learning curve effect is "practice
makes perfect". In information age industries where flexibility
and willingness to change are present the benefits of learning
curve effects should be significant. Additionally, some have argued
that the more complex the undertaking the greater the rate of
learning. [Wilfred B. Hirschmann, Profit from the Learning
Curve, Harvard Business Review, January-February 1964] As
a consequence, in high-risk, high-reward winner-take-all markets
any incremental benefits, such as those from a learning curve
effect, may be sufficient to determine the winner. Another author
claims that "self-organizing systems are learning systems". David
H. Freedman, Is Management Still a Science? Harvard Business
Review, November-December 1992
- In most tangible
products diminishing returns eventually limit the positive cost
effects of the learning curve.
- This may
also help explain why market share is profitable and why pursuit
of market share is a rational strategy for many organizations.
In the 1970's and 1980's the Boston Consulting Group used the
learning curve in support of strategies seeking significant market
share positions. John S. Hammond III and Gerald B. Allan, Note
on the Boston Consulting Group Concept of Competitive Analysis
and Corporate Strategy, Harvard Business School Note #175175,
1983. Learning curve effects have also been used to explain some
of the results from the PIMS (Profit Impact of Marketing Strategy)
database which show a correlation between market share and profitability.
Robert D. Buzzell, Bradley T. Gale, Ralph G.M. Sultan, Market
Share - A Key to Profitability, Harvard Business Review, January-February
1975.
- For a general
discussion of the concept see When Winners Take All, The
Economist, November 25, 1995 at 82. Other discussions on the topic
can be found on the web at http://www.adm.duke.edu/alumni/dm13/silver.html
and http://www.gsm.cornell.edu/NewIdeas/PressReleases/WinnerTakeAll.html
- If there
are significant entry barriers this elimination of lower-tiered
competitiors may increase the riskiness inherent in the market.
If the "superstar" winner subsequently becomes less desired the
concentration of decision making in fewer hands may result in
sub-optimal results. (All your eggs in one basket problem.) Markets
with numerous competitors are more robust than single firm marketplaces,
even if the single firm is currently the most desired or lowest
cost producer, because of the risk posed by a single firm's mistake
is more easily corrected by consumers shifting to competitive
products in a contested market.
- Technically,
network effect should be used to describe situations where there
are increasing returns as the number of network participants increases
and network externalities should be limited to situations where
the network effect creates less than optimal conditions where
a decision maker does not bear the full costs of his or her decision.
S. J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis, Network Externality:
An Uncommon Tragedy, 8 Journal of Economic Perspectives 133
(1994).
- Nicholas
Economides, The Economics of Networks, 14 International
Journal of Industrial Organization (March 1996).
- Economists
refer to this as increasing returns. In the physical world one
could think of this as a virtuous circle, where feedback from
the growth becomes self-reinforcing.
- Often cited
examples of this phenomenon are the well-known Betamax/VHS, Windows/Macintosh,
8 track/cassette audio tapes situations.
- The first
mover advantages may also be related to the marketplace advantages
enjoyed by early or quick success in the movie and television
industries.
- A similar
phenomenon is beginning to appear with searches on the internet.
So many "hits" are returned that an exhaustive search may no longer
be effective. Automated agents and filtering mechanisms may help
but there is a concern that those who control the filters (Microsoft
Sidewalk is an example) could
- Digi-marking
is the electronic tagging of copyrighted work with identifying
information that can assist in tracing the origin of the work.
Copy protection schemes, at one time widely employed in the software
market, may also reappear - and already have done so for high-end
software products.
- If self-organizing
systems orchestrate the formation of undesirable structures and
do so without leaders, is it fair or correct to look for culpable
leaders who are the architects, the master planners, of these
self-organizing structures? Is the queen termite "responsible"
for the construction of the termite colony mound on the plains
of Africa? No, and it is an example of the centralized mindset
to even call her the "queen", which implies leadership.
- 1. justice
(distributional justice under the capitalist criterion whereby
each receives according to contribution and according to voluntary
bargained-for exchange, 2. rights (right of free consent, voluntary
exchange, freedom of choice), and 3. utility (resources are allocated,
used and distributed efficiently).
- Some have
even argued that computers are the largest driver of wage inequality
in the emerging winner-take-all information age economy. By these
accounts the concentration of greater economic rewards in proportionately
fewer hands will lead to a substantial income and wealth gap,
and since one "votes with dollars" in allocating resources in
the free market economy those with more dollars get more "votes"
in this resource allocation process. Whether or not this is "fair"
is left for others to decide. Neil Munro, For Richer and Poorer,
The National Journal, July 18, 1998. For a discussion of the moral
legitimacy concerning these competitively determined profits and
incomes see Derek Bok, The Cost of Talent: How Executives and
Professionals Are Paid and How It Affects America (Free Press,
1993).
- In fact the
opposite may occur. If each side keeps increasing its "arms build-up"
it is possible that each is less secure (or at least no more secure)
than it was before the race began.
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