American Economic Review
ISSN 0002-8282 (Print) | ISSN 1944-7981 (Online)
Standard Setting Committees: Consensus Governance for Shared Technology Platforms
American Economic Review
vol. 102,
no. 1, February 2012
(pp. 305–36)
Abstract
Voluntary Standard Setting Organizations (SSOs) use a consensus process to create new compatibility standards. Practitioners have suggested that SSOs are increasingly politicized and perhaps incapable of producing timely standards. This article develops a simple model of standard setting committees and tests its predictions using data from the Internet Engineering Task Force, an SSO that produces many of the standards used to run the Internet. The results show that an observed slowdown in standards production between 1993 and 2003 can be linked to distributional conflicts created by the rapid commercialization of the Internet. (JEL C78, L15, L86)Citation
Simcoe, Timothy. 2012. "Standard Setting Committees: Consensus Governance for Shared Technology Platforms." American Economic Review, 102 (1): 305–36. DOI: 10.1257/aer.102.1.305Additional Materials
JEL Classification
- C78 Bargaining Theory; Matching Theory
- L15 Information and Product Quality; Standardization and Compatibility
- L86 Information and Internet Services; Computer Software