Do Digital Platforms Require a New Regulatory Regime? A Debate Between Jason Furman and Joshua Wright

Do Digital Platforms Require a New Regulatory Regime? A Debate Between Jason Furman and Joshua Wright

TPI is pleased to announce Bonus Aspen content open to everyone, scheduled for Monday, October 26 from 2-2:45 pm. We will be joined by Jason Furman, Professor of the Practice of Economics, Harvard and former chair, Council of Economic Advisers, and Joshua Wright, University Professor at Scalia Law School, George Mason University, and executive director Global Antitrust Institute, and former member, Federal Trade Commission, for a debate. Our very own Tom Lenard will moderate.

TPI Digital Regulatory Regime Debate: Bonus Aspen Content Open to All
Monday, October 26, 2020 2-2:45pm EDT

REGISTER HERE
Be it resolved: We need a new regulatory regime for digital platforms

For the resolution: Jason Furman
Against the resolution: Joshua Wright
Furman and Wright will debate the merits of adopting a new regulatory regime for large digital platforms such as Amazon, Facebook, and Google. Over the last two years, at least four major reports from leading government and academic institutions have recommended proposals for further regulation, some including a new regulatory agency. Perhaps the most prominent of those reports was produced last year by the UK’s Digital Competition Expert Panel chaired by Jason Furman. The basic theme running through all these reports is that aggressive antitrust enforcement is not sufficient to constrain the market power of large digital platforms, and that we therefore need new regulations to supplement antitrust.

For Additional Information:
Jane Creel, 202-828-4405, [email protected]

Press Contact for Complimentary Registration:
Lindsay Poss, [email protected]

The Technology Policy Institute
The Technology Policy Institute is a non-profit research and educational organization that focuses on the economics of innovation, technological change, and related regulation in the United States and around the world. More information is available at http://www.techpolicyinstitute.org/.

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