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U.S. Should Not Follow Europe’s Antitrust Approach
Townhall.com ^ | December 14, 2021 | Edward Longe

Posted on 12/14/2021 7:04:30 AM PST by Kaslin

If anything seems to unify the U.S. and European Union, it is the misguided belief that weaponizing antitrust legislation to target big tech will improve consumer outcomes. Nowhere is this dangerous policy goal better showcased than at the Future Tech Forum in London, where antitrust hawks from Washington and Brussels met to share notes on the measures their respective governments have taken to trample on consumer welfare, destroy innovation and delay progress.

While the EU is further along in its desire to weaponize antitrust legislation against big tech companies, the U.S. still has time to stop, pause, and chart its own path. For the sake of consumers, however, U.S. antitrust enforcers must reject European influences on antitrust enforcement and pursue its own path that prioritizes consumer welfare.

Historically, Europe and the United States have diverged in how they deal with antitrust issues. Throughout much of its short history, Europe has been guided by a ‘big is bad’ mentality to competition and antitrust policy. Under this rigid and uncomplicated belief that dominant companies are harmful to competition. For European consumers, this approach has seen efficient markets destroyed and consumers left paying the price.

The United States, on the other hand, has traditionally employed the more nuanced consumer welfare standard that recognizes consumers should be the central focus of antitrust thought. Under the consumer welfare standard, large companies can exist and grow, providing they do not hurt consumers through reduced output or higher prices. Application of the consumer welfare standard is why Congress approved the consolidation of the airline industry after the September 11th attacks and great recession.

Europe's subservience to big is bad was clearly displayed in the fine it issued to Google for allegedly abusing its market dominance. In 2017, the EU fined Google €2.42 billion because it supposedly "abused its market dominance as a search engine by promoting its own comparison-shopping service in its search results and demoting those of competitors." These actions, according to Margrethe Vestager, Europe's Commissioner for Competition, "denied other companies the chance to compete on the merits and to innovate. And most importantly, it denied European consumers a genuine choice of services and the full benefits of innovation."

Unlike European regulators, American antitrust authorities would have employed a more nuanced approach through the consumer welfare standard to evaluate Google's behavior and asked whether the alleged companies’ actions denied consumers access to lower-priced or superior goods. If U.S. authorities found consumer harm, they would have acted to protect consumers. Conversely, if consumer outcomes were improved, enforcers would have allowed the behavior to continue.

The most important aspect of this approach is that it prioritizes consumers over competition and recognizes that big can mean better in some instances.

While these fines may be justified on the grounds that they will deter anti-competitive behavior, financial penalties of this magnitude ultimately harm consumers in the long run. For example, Google's €2.42 billion fine means the company now cannot invest as much capital into improving its core search engine or developing ancillary products such as android devices or the Google office suite. Without these investments, consumers are left with fewer products and delayed innovation.

There is also empirical evidence that shows Europe's rigid enforcement of ‘big is bad’ has left it lagging behind the United States. Jan Rybicek from the Global Antitrust Institute, for example, found that emphasizing consumer welfare over ‘big is bad’ has allowed the U.S entrepreneurs to "develop new ideas, business models, and has motivated capital to take risks on them." Europe, on the other hand, has "struggled to develop a successful innovation culture" because it places too much power in the hands of regulators who place "far less faith in the market."

Rybieck's warning is clear. Importing Europe's approach to antitrust will risk America's global leadership in innovation and harm consumers by denying them the fruits of innovation.

Given the shared desire in Washington and Brussels to rein in big tech, it seems almost inevitable that both governments will weaponize antitrust further to rein in big tech and score political points at home. Yet, while Europe is much further along in this process, particularly with the likely passage of the Digital Markets Act, Washington still has time to reconsider whether following Europe's example is in the best interest of consumers.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: antitrust; europeanunion

1 posted on 12/14/2021 7:04:30 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

The “trusts” are collusions between Big Tech and Big Government - why would there be Federal action against them?


2 posted on 12/14/2021 7:08:31 AM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: Kaslin

I once hated most anti-trust laws. Government smashing private industry seems wrong and un-American.

That said, nearly every multi-national large corporation in America has gone to the dark side.

They become like massive cancers. We need ways to deal with that.


3 posted on 12/14/2021 7:13:21 AM PST by AAABEST (NY/DC/LA media/political/military industrial complex DELENDA EST)
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To: Kaslin

Destroy Big Tech. Use any and every lever possible - most definitely including anti trust actions - to do so.

When Trump sweeps back into office, he should tell the EU to go ahead and and enact any protectionist legislation they like to target Big Tech. Not only will the US government not object, we will cheer them on.

Big Tech is the single biggest threat to American democracy. They must be destroyed.


4 posted on 12/14/2021 7:15:06 AM PST by FLT-bird
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To: Kaslin

I don’t think we need anti-trust laws here, just remove their special liability protection and let the lawsuits carve them to pieces.


5 posted on 12/14/2021 7:38:59 AM PST by Boogieman
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To: Kaslin

We shouldn’t be “following” anyone. We’re the US... We should be LEADING.

Of course, with the current cabal in charge, we couldn’t lead our way out of a wet paper bag. But we have mechanisms whereby that can change.


6 posted on 12/14/2021 7:42:36 AM PST by Dead Corpse (A Psalm in napalm...)
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To: Kaslin

I’m really against declaring companies too big to live. It’s just a bad slope. Especially the model currently being run around of basically capping revenue. Because we know it won’t adjust to inflation. And it’s just setting a mercy rule to help you competitors. It’s similar to when some cities decided to “fight” big box stores by setting a square footage cap on retail space. Attacking the wrong aspect for the wrong reasons.


7 posted on 12/14/2021 7:44:36 AM PST by discostu (Like a dog being shown a card trick )
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To: Kaslin

Europe just wants their piece of the pie. They want big tech to pay them off. Hence why they only fined Google.


8 posted on 12/14/2021 7:50:39 AM PST by for-q-clinton (Cancel Culture IS fascism...Let's start calling it that!)
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To: for-q-clinton

And there is the real reason.


9 posted on 12/14/2021 9:01:55 AM PST by pas
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To: Kaslin

Google needs to be divested of Youtube and Android.
Amazon needs to be divested of AWS, Whole Foods and blocked from buying MGM.
Meta and Twitter need to come under the same regulations as the phone company.


10 posted on 12/14/2021 9:18:51 AM PST by kaktuskid
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