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EU Data Act: what impact on value creation?

EU data falling into a wormhole

The European Commission proposed new rules on who can use and access data generated in the EU. Jointly, these new rules are expected to create €270 billion of additional GDP by 2028. What are the main value creation opportunities? Where will the future battles for value capture take place? How to prepare?

The Data Act’s main measures

As stated by the European Commission, the proposal for the Data Act includes:

Impacts on Datanomics

Firstly, we can sketch out what the impact of this regulation on each of the three forms of value could be: data as a commodity when they are traded; data as a lever when they are used either to reduce costs of operations or increase revenue; and data as an asset when they are used to increase bargaining power within an industry or a value chain.

We can also analyse what the possible consequences on value distribution between competitors or partners in value chains could be:

Questions and strategic choices

This regulation is reinforcing trends already taking place: transfer of value at the dowstream part of the value chain, growth of platforms, increase of data market.

It’s also opening for new ones mainly through portability of data, which could act as a game changer. However, we already heard the story of portability as a driver of competition. It was one component of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) enforced in 2018. A few years later, we can see that this possibility of transfering the data to other services has not produced any significant effect. Very few, if any, users asked Facebook for their personal data in order to upload them to another social network. Will the situation be different for industrial data?

Beyond this uncertainty, the regulation opens two sets of questions for companies manufacturing connected products:

There is still a long way for this regulation to be enforced and we need to be cautious about the feasability of data portability. However, this regulation surfs on pre-existing trends which are already taking place. The future will tell how significant the impact is and how fast the changes take place.



This article was first published on Prof. Benyayer’s blog.

This post gives the views of its author, not the position of ESCP Business School.

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