Competition in digital advertising markets

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-101
Author(s):  
Simeon Thornton ◽  
Chris Jenkins ◽  
Marie-Madeleine Husunu

Digital advertising, both display advertising and search advertising, represents a very important part of the overall advertising market in the United Kingdom. Google and Facebook have a high degree of market power in search and display advertising, respectively. On 1 July 2020, the Competition and Markets Authority published its Final Report on its market study into online platforms and digital advertising, in which it looked in some depth at digital advertising markets, assessing whether a lack of transparency, conflicts of interest, and the leveraging of market power undermine competition in digital advertising. This article examines the issues considered by, and the findings of, the CMA in its Market Study and set out in its Final Report, and describes the policy options identified in the Market Study for promoting competition and other policy goals, such as data protection and privacy and ensuring the viability of news publishers, in digital advertising markets.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 567-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beth K. Yudkowsky ◽  
Jenifer D. C. Cartland ◽  
Samuel S. Flint

Optimal pediatrician participation in the Medicaid program is essential if the full benefits of recent eligibility expansions are to be realized. A 1989 national survey of the members of the American Academy of Pediatrics (n = 940), designed as a follow-up to similar studies conducted in 1978 and 1983, was an examination of the factors that influence pediatrician participation. Between 1978 and 1989: (1) basic participation (treating any Medicaid beneficiaries) declined to 77% from 85%; (2) limited participation (seeing only some Medicaid beneficiaries who request care) increased from 26% to 39.4%; and (3) extent of participation (the percentage of a pediatrician's patients who are Medicaid beneficiaries) increased from 15.7% to 19.4%. A dichotomous conceptualization of participation (restricted or unrestricted) was developed. By this definition, only 56% of pediatricians allowed comparable access to their practices for both Medicaid and private patients. Low reimbursement and slow payments discouraged participation. Medicaid reimbursement to pediatricians was approximately equal to their overhead costs. However, a high degree of willingness to care for Medicaid children remains if fees are increased to within 11% to 16% of the private market level. Policy options to enhance participation are discussed.


Author(s):  
Suay Melisa Ozkula ◽  
Paul Reilly ◽  
Jennifer Hayes

Burgess and Bruns (2015) have linked the computational turn in social media research to a rise in studies that focus exclusively on ‘easy’ data, such as the ‘low hanging fruit’ provided by Twitter hashtags. This paper set out to explore whether this preponderance of easy data and studies focused on the 2011-12 protests is evident in research between 1995 and 2019 through a systematic review of digital activism literature (N = 1444). A particular focus of the review was the extent to which digital activism research revolved around the use of computational digital methods, case studies based in Europe and North America and data gathered from single online platforms (e.g. Twitter). The review showed that most of these studies focused on social movements, campaigns, activists, and parties based in the United Kingdom and United States, and were conducted by researchers based in universities in these countries. In contrast, there were relatively few articles addressing activism, institutions and platforms in non-Western /Global South contexts with the exception of the Arab Spring in 2011. In terms of methodological approaches, traditional research methods and big data digital methods studies were prevalent. In response to the easy data hypothesis, the study found that Twitter was the most researched platform in the corpus, but that digital methods were not as commonly deployed in these articles as traditional methods. Thus, the paper concludes argues in favor of greater diversity in digital activism research in terms of its methods, participants, and countries of origin.


The article considers the main problems that arise when conflicts of interest between people in the sociometric dimension. The need for their comprehensive study will help to eliminate the negative consequences and use positive solutions to these conflicts for the development of the individual, his integration into society. The urgency of the work lies in the search for rational approaches to the origin and prevention of psychological bullying in the sociometric dimension as a consequence of the conflict of personality in agreement with its characterological education, psychological attitudes and beliefs. that is why the problem of bullying deserves in-depth study. The aim of the article is to study the influence of bullying on the uncertainty of adolescents in the sociometric dimension. The work is based on the provisions of prevention and reduction of external discrimination, isolation, humiliation and harassment, which will serve as factors to prevent personal uncertainty in the future. Bullying undermines the victim's self-confidence, destroys health, self-esteem and human dignity. There is a bullying structure, which is a social system that includes the offender, the victim and observers. Methods of measuring the manifestations of psychological bullying are determined, the corresponding set of methods of psychodiagnostics is presented and tested. Empirical data show that with insufficient and excessive mobilization of the individual there are with a high degree of probability such mental states that disturb the adaptive balance. Thus, with insufficient mobilization in a difficult life situation, it is likely to appear apathy and reduce energy expenditure. On the other hand, in a situation of excessive mobilization there is a state of high voltage against the background of excessive energy consumption. The results of this study are important in establishing international cooperation in the study of programs and projects in the context of transforming the human health system in accordance with international partnership standards and implementing a cultural exchange program for education and culture between countries.


Author(s):  
Saori Shibata

This chapter examines the impact of Japan's precarious workers' movement on policymaking in Japan, highlighting three cases through which one can witness the effects of opposition mobilized by Japanese nonregular workers on policy outcomes. In each case, one witnesses political elites being forced to respond to successful mobilizations by precarious workers and organizations that have emerged to represent their interests. These mobilizations have served to attract public attention to the impact that neoliberal government policy has on precarious workers. When faced with criticism and opposition from the public, on each occasion governments were forced either to compromise on policy goals or proposals or to abolish or postpone policies to reduce criticism. While precarious workers were not always able to achieve all of their goals, collectively they have become an important actor that is able to gain concessions or raise significant obstacles to the implementation of neoliberal policy options so that their demands must be accommodated in some way.


2003 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Ploog ◽  
Michael Stolpe

AbstractThis paper discusses policy options to reduce underpricing in initial public offerings (IPOs). It surveys recent theoretical insights into the causes and welfare implications of underpricing and reviews evidence on the signalling hypothesis, the winner’s curse model, the role of underwriters in assessing issuing firms’ future profitability and the genesis of speculative bubbles in IPO markets. The paper concludes that governments should curtail the abuse of market power in underwriting by prohibiting the allocation of shares to insiders and by reducing the incentives for investment banks to exploit underpriced share issues in order to cross-subsidise unrelated lines of business. Moreover, governments should seek to stabilize the IPO market by committing themselves to regular equal-sized issues of shares in government assets as part of a long-term privatisation programme.


1999 ◽  
Vol 1999 ◽  
pp. 130-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hill ◽  
A.B. Notman ◽  
S.P. Marsh

Maize silage is a popular feed for dairy and beef cattle in the United Kingdom, but its popularity for sheep production has never been great. Several reasons for the lack of interest in maize silage for ewes and lambs have been cited; the growth of an annual crop for silage on holdings with a predominance of long-term leys, the low requirement of ewes and lambs for conserved feed, the possibility of low voluntary DM intakes and the risk of a high degree of selection of dietary components of the diet (Brown and Thomas, 1989). The research reported here examines the use of maize silage for ewes in late pregnancy and early lactation.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 763-763
Author(s):  
Guillermo Garcia-Manero ◽  
Francesco Paolo Tambaro ◽  
Nebiyou Bekele ◽  
Hui Yang ◽  
Farhad Ravandi ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 763 The combination of vorinostat, a panhistone deacetylase inhibitor with activity in relapsed AML (Blood 2008;111:1060), with idarubicin and ara-C has synergistic antileukemia activity in a sequence dependent fashion were optimal effect is observed when vorinostat precedes ara-C (Blood 2006;108:1174 and CCR 2009;15:1698). In a phase I trial, we documented the maximal tolerated dose of vorinostat to be 500 mg orally three times a day for 3 days with standard dose idarubicin (BJH 2010; 150:72). Based on this we performed a phase II trial of vorinostat with idarubicin and ara-C in front line AML and higher risk MDS. Patients ages 15 to 65 years with appropriate organ function and no core binding factor abnormality were candidates. Induction therapy was vorinostat 500 mg orally three times a day (days 1 to 3), idarubin 12 mg/m2 IV daily × 3 (days 4 to 6), cytarabine 1.5 gm/m2 IV as a continuous infusion daily for 3 or 4 days (days 4 to 7). Patients in remission could be treated with 5 cycles of consolidation therapy with lower doses of the combination and up to 12 months of maintenance with single agent vorinostat. The study was designed to stop early if excess toxicity or low probability of event free survival (EFS) >28 weeks were likely. After a 3 patient run-in phase, 75 patients were treated. Median age was 52 (19–65) years, 29 (39%) were diploid and 11 (15%) were Flt-3 ITD. Therapy was well tolerated: no excess vorinostat related toxicity was observed. Induction mortality was 4%. Common toxicities included: diarrhea (72%), nausea and vomiting (65%), and skin toxicity (38%). No cardiac toxicity was observed. CR was documented in 57 (76%) patients and CRp in additional 7 (9%) for an overall response rate (ORR) of 85% (95% CI 0.75–0.91). No differences in response were observed in patients younger or older than 60 years. Seven (9%) patients received 2 cycles of induction therapy and 4 (44%) responded including 2 CR and 2 CRps. When analyzed based on molecular or cytogenetic features, 10 of the 11 patients with Flt-3 ITD achieved a CR and 1 a CRp (ORR 100%). All 6 NPM1 mut/Flt-3 wild type (WT) patients achieved CR. Presence of Ras mutations had no impact on response. Of the diploid patients, 25 (86%) achieved a CR and 2 a CRp (7%) (ORR 93%). Patients with other cytogenetic alteration excluding −5/–7 had an ORR of 93% including 23 (79%) CR and 4 CRp (14%). Only 9 (53%) patients with −5/−7 achieved a CR and 1 (6%) a CRp for an ORR of 64% (p=0.018). Responses were significantly higher than with standard IA therapy. With a median follow up of 82 weeks (5 to 132 weeks), the median OS for the whole group was 82 (range 3–134) and EFS 47 (3–134) weeks. Median OS and EFS for patients with Flt-3 ITD were 91 (range 6 to 134) and 66 (6–134) weeks. There was a trend towards better survival in the Flt-3 ITD patients versus the unmutated group (p=0.067). Patients with diploid cytogenetics had a median OS and EFS of 105 (5–134) and 68 weeks (5–134). There was a trend towards better survival in the diploid patients versus non-diploid patients (p=0.09). Survival was poorer in patients with −5/−7: OS was 34 weeks (range 3–92) and EFS 14 (3–92). Non-diploid non −5/−7 patients had a median OS of 92 weeks (5–119) and EFS was not reached (NR) (5–119). Nineteen patients (25%) were transplanted in CR#1. All patients had achieved CR/CRp before SCT. Eleven (57%) received an unrelated donor including 2 umbilical cords and two 1 antigen mismatch. Fifteen patients (79%) received ablative preparative regimens. Median OS and EFS had not been reached in the 19 patients transplanted. Robust induction of histone H3 acetylation was documented in 2 patients (2%). No induction of beclin was observed in any of the patients. Baseline levels of NRF2 were elevated in 6 of 34 patients (17%), CYBB 21 of 34 (61%), FOXO3 5 of 34 (14%), SOD1 11 of 34 (32%), SOD2 5 of 34 (14%), GST-PI 2 of 34% (6%), IL6 3 of 49 (6%), TIMP1 7 of 49 (14%), MMP9 4 of 49 (8%) and p38MAPK in 3 of 49 (6%). mRNA upregulation occurred in all genes starting as early as day 3 of therapy. Baseline levels of NRF2 and CYBB were associated with longer survival. No association between age or cytogenetics were found with NRF2 or CYBB. In summary, the combination of vorinostat with IA is associated with high induction response rates. Toxicity and EFS rules were not met and the study beat expectations. Further studies comparing it to standard IA or “7+3” programs and in patients with Flt-3 ITD should be proposed. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Significance However, member states have the dominant foreign policy role in the EU. After Brexit, that will be France and Germany despite the United Kingdom insisting that it wants to maintain as close a relationship with the EU as possible. Impacts EU reformers will light on foreign policy as an area to drive forwarded integration. However, the EEAS lacks the competencies and institutional horsepower to be a force for integration. The strategic needs of the 27 post-Brexit EU members will be various, thus acting as a drag on integration. Smaller EU member states will see more advantage than larger ones in collectively pursuing foreign policy goals through Brussels. Larger member states will be unwilling to submit their national defence policies to greater EU authority.


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