Battling bigness: Congress eyes action against monopolies
The economic dislocation of the pandemic has laid bare the struggles of small businesses unable to compete with corporate giants that have been able to capitalize on the new order. Experts and lawmakers are throwing out stunning stats:
The four biggest airlines control about 65% of
Beer and a burger? Four companies are estimated to control 80% of
Critics say the corporate concentration is quickening, limiting consumers’ choices, raising prices and eroding service.
Sen.
“At stake is nothing less than the future of our economy and the way of life that it supports,” Klobuchar said at the panel’s first hearing last week. “This is about saving capitalism and building an economy that works for all Americans.”
At the extreme, experts don’t expect the antitrust push to force breakups of big corporations, as is being called for by many critics of Big Tech. But legislative success could make it harder for the companies to make new acquisitions and shift the burden to them to prove that a given merger would be good for consumers. Right now the onus is on the government to prove a merger would be bad.
The current drift toward bigness began with a merger boom in the 1980s in corporate America that fattened profits for the dominant companies. Decisions by both Democratic and Republican administrations over the past 15 years have allowed most big mergers to sail through.
With anti-monopoly sentiment having a moment, some observers see possible bipartisan agreement on new legislation, with Klobuchar’s blueprint a likely starting point to be pushed and pulled.
“We have a monopoly problem in the U.S.,” said
“Is it a tweak or is it a big reform? Something’s going to happen,” said Grunes, now an attorney with
Industry executives can be expected to make similar arguments when they weigh in on Klobuchar’s legislation at upcoming hearings and mount a lobbying blitz. So far Corporate America hasn't spoken out publicly on the new antitrust initiative.
Republican lawmakers are denouncing a new school of antitrust thought, gaining currency among
Biden has named a scholar who’s an adherent of this school, called “hipster antitrust” by its detractors, as a top presidential adviser on competition. And he’s expected to name another to a seat on the
With this approach,
“What we need now is not a sweeping transformation of the antitrust laws,” Sen.
Also, Lee said,
As a moderate Democrat, Klobuchar may be looking to try on Republican President Teddy Roosevelt’s “Trustbuster” mantle. Her book coming out next month is titled “Taking on
Sen.
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