Existence, antecedents and consequences of non-compliance in mobile app markets
Reinhold Kesler,
Bernd Skiera,
Lennart Kraft and
Tim Koschella
No 419, DICE Discussion Papers from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics (DICE)
Abstract:
Digital platforms, now ubiquitous intermediaries in the modern economy, claim to uphold governance rules to ensure a level playing field for their participants. However, there is limited research exploring whether digital platforms fulfill this claim. Furthermore, the antecedents and consequences of any non-compliance remain largely unexamined. This paper addresses this research gap by examining non-compliance in the mobile app market. The empirical study compares the disclosed with the actual behavior concerning device ID transfer for advertising purposes of 852 apps available on Apple and Google platforms across 19 countries. The findings reveal that about 40% of the apps do not comply. Compliance is more prevalent among apps catering to Apple (EU) users than Google (non-European) users. Notably, older apps demonstrate greater compliance. However, popularity and reputation do not explain compliance, while app categories and connections to certain supply-side platforms do. Intriguingly, non-compliant apps earn at least 10% more advertising revenue than they would if being compliant, thus gaining a significant economic edge.
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zbw:dicedp:315208
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