Generated by GPT-5-mini| David S. Evans | |
|---|---|
| Name | David S. Evans |
| Nationality | American |
| Occupation | Economist, academic, consultant |
| Employer | University of Chicago (affiliations), UC Berkeley (affiliations), University of Virginia (visiting) |
| Known for | Antitrust analysis, two-sided markets, platform economics, auction design |
David S. Evans
David S. Evans is an American economist, consultant, and academic known for work on antitrust, two-sided markets, platform economics, and auction design. He has held academic appointments and advisory roles across institutions and firms, contributed to policy debates involving European Commission, Federal Trade Commission, and United States Department of Justice, and published extensively on market design relevant to Microsoft Corporation, Google LLC, and Apple Inc. litigation. His career bridges scholarship at universities and practical engagement with law firms, technology firms, and regulatory bodies.
Evans received undergraduate and graduate training that prepared him for work at the intersection of Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and other research centers. He pursued advanced study in economics and law-related fields that connected him to programs at Stanford University and Yale University through conferences and visiting scholar roles. Early influences included scholars from University of Chicago and London School of Economics, and mentorship from faculty affiliated with National Bureau of Economic Research networks. His formative education combined quantitative methods from institutions linked to Princeton University and policy exposure associated with Brookings Institution events.
Evans has held faculty and research positions at multiple academic centers, collaborated with scholars at UC Berkeley, Columbia University, and University of Pennsylvania, and lectured at executive programs run by Harvard Business School and INSEAD. He co-founded and led consulting practices delivering expert testimony for litigation involving clients such as Amazon.com, Visa Inc., and Mastercard Incorporated, and advised regulators including Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and Competition and Markets Authority. In addition to academic appointments, he served in visiting roles at institutions connected to Cornell University and New York University Stern School of Business, and was a fellow in research programs affiliated with Stanford Graduate School of Business. His professional network includes collaborations with economists from University of California, Los Angeles and legal scholars from Georgetown University.
Evans is widely cited for developing and popularizing frameworks for analyzing two-sided markets and platform competition that have been influential in cases involving Intel Corporation and Qualcomm Incorporated. His research integrates industrial organization methods from MIT Press-style monographs and empirical strategies used by scholars at University of Michigan and Duke University. He has written on price structure, interoperability, network effects, and multi-sided pricing with applications to eBay Inc., PayPal, Netflix, Inc., and Uber Technologies, Inc.. Evans contributed to literature on auction design connecting theoretical work from Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences recipients and practical auction implementations used by Federal Communications Commission spectrum auctions and corporate procurement platforms. He has argued for nuanced approaches to European Union antitrust enforcement and United States competition policy, engaging with debates that also involve actors like State of California and international bodies such as Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Evans has authored and co-authored books, book chapters, and articles in journals and edited volumes associated with publishers and institutions like Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press. Notable works include collaborative pieces with scholars from Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and London Business School, empirical studies relevant to Wall Street Journal coverage of platform mergers, and policy papers cited by European Commission Directorate-General for Competition. He contributed chapters to volumes alongside authors from Princeton University Press and co-edited collections used in courses at Kellogg School of Management and Sloan School of Management. His reports and expert declarations have been submitted in high-profile matters listed on dockets at United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
Evans has received recognition from professional associations and industry groups connected to American Economic Association and International Industrial Organization Conference. His work on platforms and two-sided markets has been cited in policy statements by Federal Trade Commission staff and referenced in academic prize nominations associated with Association of American Law Schools symposia. He has been invited to present keynote addresses at conferences organized by CESifo, Allied Social Science Associations, and regional meetings of the European Association for Research in Industrial Economics.
Evans maintains affiliations with research centers and think tanks tied to University of Chicago Booth School of Business and policy organizations including Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. He has served as an advisor to startups and corporate boards in sectors involving digital platforms and payments such as firms located in Silicon Valley and London. Outside his professional work, he has participated in public forums hosted by Council on Foreign Relations and contributed op-eds in outlets associated with Financial Times and The Economist.