4.2 Article

To discriminate or not to discriminate? Personalised pricing in online markets as exploitative abuse of dominance

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF LAW AND ECONOMICS
Volume 50, Issue 3, Pages 381-404

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10657-019-09636-3

Keywords

Price discrimination; Personalised pricing; EU competition law; Exploitative abuse; Remedies

Funding

  1. Max Planck Society

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The advent of big data analytics has favoured the emergence of forms of price discrimination based on consumers' profiles and their online behaviour (i.e. personalised pricing). The paper analyses this practice as a possible exploitative abuse by dominant online platforms. The paper argues that, in view of its mixed effect on consumers' welfare, personalised pricing requires a case-by-case assessment under EU competition law and thus it should not be banned a priori. However, in view of the recent case law of the European Court of Justice on price discrimination, the National Competition Authorities (NCAs) and the European Commission would face a high burden of proof to sanction this conduct under Art. 102(c) TFEU. Finally, the paper argues that, due to its case-by-case approach, competition law seems more suitable thanomnibusregulation to tackle the negative effects that personalised pricing could have on consumers' welfare. In particular, an NCA/the European Commission could negotiate with online platforms different kinds of behavioural commitments: transparency requirements, limits on data collection/user profiling, rights to opt out of personalised pricing and the obligation to share customers' data with competitors could significantly tame the risks of personalised pricing.

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