The Economics of AI Supply Chain Regulation
arXiv cs.AI / 3/16/2026
💬 OpinionIdeas & Deep AnalysisIndustry & Market MovesModels & Research
Key Points
- The paper develops a game-theoretic model with a provider and two downstream firms to analyze AI supply chain regulation and its effects on consumer welfare.
- It finds that pro-price-competitive policies increase consumer surplus only when compute or data preprocessing costs are high, while compute subsidies are effective only when those costs are low.
- Pro-quality-competitive policies always raise consumer surplus but tend to boost the provider's profits at the expense of downstream firms.
- The study identifies potential win-win-win outcomes under either pro-price-competitive policies or compute subsidies, benefiting providers, downstream firms, and consumers simultaneously.
- As compute costs decline, pro-price-competitive policies may lose effectiveness, whereas subsidies may become more effective, offering nuanced guidance for policymakers.
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