An Old Problem in a New Market: Public and Private Regulation of Counterfeit Consumer Goods in the Chinese C2C Market
Abstract
The emergence of consumer-to-consumer (C2C) online marketplaces in China has greatly
complicated the regulation of counterfeit goods. Endemic information asymmetries,
strong consumer demand for counterfeits, and conflicting economic interests have challenged
the effectiveness of independent government regulation and marketplace self-regulation
but also created conditions for co-regulation. Using historical analysis, this thesis
examines the evolution of government regulation and marketplace self-regulation of
C2C counterfeits in China. It assesses the forces that have driven the shifts in
the regulatory paradigm, and evaluates the complexity of Chinese online counterfeit
regulation. The Chinese regulatory regime against fake goods online has been mostly
shaped by the nation’s perceived economic interests and the business interests of
the chief online commercial platform, Taobao. This regime, moreover, has been gradually
evolving from independent government regulation and marketplace self-regulation toward
co-regulation. The well-developed regulatory paradigm, nonetheless, bears an expedient
character, as regulators have often used the regulation to advance certain interests
over the others. The regulation of C2C online counterfeit in China also reveals the
limits of and opportunities for transnational regulatory governance of online intellectual
property.
Description
Honors thesis with highest distinction
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Public Policy StudiesPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9496Citation
Sui, Xinshu (2015). An Old Problem in a New Market: Public and Private Regulation of Counterfeit Consumer
Goods in the Chinese C2C Market. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9496.Collections
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