The Digital Markets Act (DMA) will have significant extraterritorial effects: It applies directly – and with the exception of Booking.com currently exclusively – to non-European undertakings. It may shape markets beyond the EU single market: gatekeepers may decide to adhere to the EU standards on an international level and other jurisdictions may respond to the DMA with similar regulation. In this paper, we firstly assess the conditions under which digital regulation takes effect beyond the EU. We submit that the DMA meets these criteria in general as well as for specific obligations. Whilst it is difficult to establish which jurisdiction designed the blueprints of digital regulation and inspired others (concerning the de jure indirect extraterritorial effect), we found several strong reasons in favour of significant de facto extraterritorial effects of certain obligations. Secondly, we discuss whether it is legitimate that the EU imposes its understanding of how digital markets should work on other jurisdictions. We suggest to consider direct extraterritorial effects to be legitimate if there is a sufficient link to the jurisdiction and the regulatory competition is fair, i.e., if there is no (significant) asymmetry of power or the effects are proportionate to attaining digital sovereignty.
World Competition