Product-market regulation, entry barriers, licensing burdens, network-industry regulation, price controls.
Sector-specific licensing regimes, concentration / quota allocation, state-controlled entry (energy, telecoms, healthcare, banking).
Trade policy openness — tariffs, non-tariff barriers, FTAs, industrial protection.
Twin regulatory stack governing the largest online platforms. DMA (Regulation 2022/1925, effective 2 May 2023, with six designated gatekeepers from September 2023: Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta, Microsoft; later Booking) imposes ex-ante obligations on core platform services: interoperability mandates, self-preferencing bans, data-portability requirements, anti-tying rules. DSA (Regulation 2022/2065, fully applicable 17 February 2024) imposes content- moderation, algorithmic-transparency, and systemic-risk-audit obligations on Very Large Online Platforms and Search Engines. Penalty ceilings: 10% of global turnover (DMA) and 6% (DSA). Framework codes this as mixed-direction on product-market competition: the interoperability and anti-self-preferencing rules are pro-entrant if enforced as designed, while compliance-cost fixed-costs and gatekeeper-designation thresholds raise barriers elsewhere.
Per invariant 3, reforms are scored by what they did on each channel-separated axis, not by the party that enacted them. This fingerprint is how the policy-match engine finds historical analogues.
Explicit links are curated by the author. Inferred links are hypotheses in the library that test the same axes this policy moved — the framework's answer to "what does the data say about a policy like this?".
Ranked by axis-fingerprint overlap with this policy. Direction match bolded — those are the closest historical analogues. Shape of the match is what drives policy-outcome comparison, not the country or party label.
Migrated from movements/eu_digital_markets_act_dsa_2022.yaml (action=CONVERT). This entity is a single policy/legislation, not a coalition era; reclassified to policies/. Original movement file deleted.