Thinking of data as an economic good: what it can (not) teach us about data governance
This paper provides a systematic and critical review of the economics literature on data as an economic good and draws lessons for data governance based on that review. We conclude that focusing on data as an economic good in governance efforts is hardwired to only result in more data production and cannot deliver other societal goals contrary to what is often claimed in the literature and policy. Data governance is often a red herring which distracts from other digital problems. The governance of digital society cannot rely exclusively on data-centric economic models. Instead, we propose a political-ecological approach to governing the digital society, defined by ecological thinking about governance problems and the awareness of the political nature of framing the problems and mapping their ecological makeup.
READ FULL TEXT