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Welcome to The Corner. In this issue, we discuss Open Markets’ proposal to ban mergers during the COVID-19 pandemic and how the ventilator shortage demonstrates how monopolists make us unsafe.
To read previous editions of The Corner, click here [[link removed]].
The Shortage of Ventilators Demonstrates How Concentration Makes Us Unsafe
The New York Times reported last week that a 2012 acquisition [[link removed]] by multinational medical device manufacturer Covidien stopped the planned production of highly affordable ventilators that the government had sought to produce in case of a national emergency. The lack of ventilators might well cost the lives of Americans suffering from COVID-19. As the Times report made clear, this shortage appears to be the result of an anti-competitive acquisition.
In 2008, Newport Medical Instruments, a small medical device company in California, was awarded a government contract to produce 40,000 ventilators. These ventilators were meant to provide a buffer to meet the demand from hospitals during a national emergency, such as a pandemic, when lifesaving ventilators are needed. By 2010, Newport had developed a highly capable ventilator and had managed to lower the per-unit price to $3,000. However, after Newport was acquired by Covidien for $100 million, Covidien canceled the government contract, and no ventilators were ever produced for the original government project.
As the total number of confirmed U.S. cases from COVID-19 surpassed 200,000 this week, hospitals are increasingly in dire need of ventilators for infected patients. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said his state, the hardest hit by the outbreak, will need [[link removed]] 30,000 ventilators. The United States, however, only has 12,700 ventilators [[link removed]] in the Strategic National Stockpile. The government has even asked [[link removed]] Ford and General Motors to produce ventilators to increase our national supply. The ventilator shortage means that medical professionals will have to make difficult decisions, rationing ventilators to infected patients. Many of those hospitalized might die - unnecessarily - as a consequence of these decisions.
Public officials and rivals say that Covidien bought Newport to eliminate Newport as a competitor in the ventilator business. Covidien pulled out of the government contract in 2014, possibly because the deal was not profitable enough for the company and would reduce its profits for its existing ventilator products.
Covidien’s purchase of Newport is an example of a literal “killer acquisition” - one that has life or death consequences for individual Americans and families. This acquisition should have been illegal under antitrust law, as the merger substantially lessened competition in the already highly concentrated ventilator industry.
In recent years, many reformers have adopted a framework of analysis based on the idea that the political economy has been “financialized” by Wall Street, and that this process has shifted economic activity away from making things to making money. But as the Times article on ventilator production makes clear, there is a much more simple explanation. This is that the radical overthrow of anti-monopoly law a generation ago freed monopolists and mercantilists to consolidate power over entire realms of the political economy, and to use their power in ways that degrade and destroy entire systems of production on which we rely for many of our most vital goods and services.
As we noted in the last newsletter, in many instances this has resulted in the destruction of the redundancy of production necessary to ensure the resiliency and stability of the industrial systems themselves. In other instances, it has resulted in the destruction of vital industrial arts and skills, of machines and assembly lines, and of systems of innovation necessary to produce face masks, antibiotics, ventilators, and other manufactured items that keep us healthy and safe.
The Open Markets team has pioneered reporting and analysis of this process of destruction. An early example was the 2005 book End of the Line [[link removed]], with its close analysis of how Boeing was wielding power in ways that destroyed its own supply system. The Open Markets team developed this analysis further in the Harper’s article “ Breaking [[link removed]] the Chain [[link removed]]” in 2006 and in the 2010 book Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction [[link removed]].
Read more of our important and timely work on these issues here:
The Open Markets Primer on Economic Interdependence, Industrial Supply Chains, and Shocks [[link removed]]Open Markets Comment on Federal Merger Policy [[link removed]]Open Markets Comment of the Need for Strong Vertical Merger Guidelines [[link removed]]Sally Hubbard’s Comment to Global Competition Review [[link removed]] regarding America’s ventilator shortage.
Open Markets Calls for Ban on Takeovers by Large Corporations and Funds for Duration of Crisis
The Open Markets Institute last week called [[link removed]] on Congress, the Trump administration, and federal and state law enforcement agencies to impose an immediate ban on all mergers and acquisitions by any corporation with more than $100 million in annual revenue and by any financial institution or equity fund with more than $100 million in capitalization. The ban should remain in place for the duration of the present crisis.
These mergers should be prohibited because the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), and other law enforcement agencies are now unable to effectively evaluate mergers, given the semi-closure of government because of COVID-19.
More fundamentally, the ban is necessary to prevent a wholesale concentration of additional power by corporations that already dominate or largely dominate their industries, especially in ways that may significantly worsen the crisis that now threatens America’s health, social, and economic systems. The history of the panic of 2008 and the subsequent Great Recession instructs us that such a massive, uncontrolled consolidation will result in the unnecessary firing of millions of employees, the unnecessary bankrupting of innumerable independent businesses, a dramatic slowing of innovation in vital industries such as pharmaceuticals, and a further concentration of power and control dangerous both to our democracy and our open commercial systems.
Federal regulators can take up the review of larger mergers once the health crisis has passed, but they should presume that deals pursued by corporations with more than $100 million in annual revenue, and by financial institutions or equity funds with more than $100 million in capitalization, are anti-competitive unless proven otherwise. Meanwhile, Congress should also make any corporate bailouts conditional on recipients not buying their competitors.
We believe these measures are also merited because of the role concentration has played in undermining our public health, industrial, and financial systems in ways that have dramatically contributed to the COVID-19 crisis.
Among other things, we believe such a temporary ban on takeovers by larger corporations and investment funds will immediately help to protect American jobs, promote industrial resiliency, and protect democratic institutions.
Our full proposal can be read here [[link removed]].
🔊 ANTI-MONOPOLY RISING: State AGs call on Amazon, Facebook, and Others to Crack Down on COVID-19 Price Gouging. Attorneys general from 33 states called on tech companies to implement strong and proactive policies against price gouging, ”[r]ather than playing whack-a-mole” after the offense. The letter acknowledged that the companies have already taken some steps, but it also points to examples of how the problem persists: “On Amazon, U.S. PIRG found over half of the available hand sanitizers and face masks spiked at least 50% compared with the average price after the World Health Organization declared a global health emergency on Jan. 30.” ( CNBC [[link removed]])
Kansas Receives More Than $1.75 Million From Natural Gas Antitrust Lawsuit. In 2014, the attorney general of Kansas filed a brief with the Supreme Court arguing that the federal antitrust laws do not prohibit state antitrust action against price-fixing in the natural gas industry. This incident reaffirms the long-standing Supreme Court precedent that the federal antitrust laws do not prohibit the enforcement state antitrust laws and the benefits to consumers that state antitrust laws have in holding corporations accountable. Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said, “Our successful defense of state antitrust law in front of the nation’s highest court made possible this recovery of taxpayer funds exceeding $1.75 million.” ( ABC [[link removed]] Nebraska TV [[link removed]])
Colorado Seeks to Enhance Its Merger Review Authority. The Colorado General Assembly has recently passed a bill that enhances the state government’s merger review authority. The bill repeals a provision that prohibits the Colorado state attorney general from reviewing a merger that has already “been reviewed and not challenged by a federal department, agency, or commission.” The bill awaits the signature of Gov. Jared Polis. ( Colorado [[link removed]] General Assembly [[link removed]])
📝 WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO:
Open Markets submitted a comment [[link removed]] to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on banning noncompete clauses for all workers. The comment lays out the argument for why the FTC can and should initiate a rule to ban these clauses under its authority to police unfair methods of competition. Along with the comment, Open Markets also resubmitted its March 2019 petition on noncompete clauses, which was signed by 46 individual advocates and scholars, as well as by 19 labor and public interest organizations.
Open Markets submitted a comment [[link removed]] to the FTC on the agency’s proposed settlement with three rent-to-own companies over their agreement not to compete with one another. The FTC found that the three firms - Aaron’s Inc., Buddy Newco, LLC, and Rent-A-Center Inc - had agreed to carefully allocate markets in ways that reduced competition for their services. The FTC did not punish the companies for violating multiple laws, and the proposed settlement only instructs the offenders to obey the law. Such a settlement fails entirely to hold these companies to account for their intentional violations of the law.
Journalist Rachel Cohen, in partnership with Open Markets, wrote [[link removed]] an article on The Intercept about the process for developing and distributing a vaccine for COVID-19 and about the role of the federal government in managing research, as well as in facilitating the development and distribution of vaccines in partnership with pharmaceutical companies
Sally Hubbard was quoted [[link removed]] in Global Competition Review regarding a 2012 acquisition of California ventilator manufacturer Newport by rival Covidien. Newport was awarded a contract by the federal government to manufacture ventilators for the government’s emergency reserves, but Covidien backed out of the project after acquiring Newport. The merger is “too literal of an example of a killer acquisition. A paradigm that looks only at the size of deals … is dangerous not just for competition, but for public health,” Hubbard said.
Sally Hubbard spoke [[link removed]] with Politico about antitrust enforcement of the tech giants during the COVID-19 pandemic and their partnerships with the Trump administration. “The tech giants have been violating the antitrust laws for years. What was always missing was a lack of political will to enforce the antitrust laws against these companies, and those tides have turned in the last year and a half, and so I definitely think if all of a sudden these companies are America’s darlings again, there could be some deterioration of that political will, at least at the federal level,” Hubbard said.
Sally Hubbard spoke with CNN Business [[link removed]] and Brinkwire [[link removed]] about Apple’s acquisition of the weather app Dark Sky and its plan to remove the app from Google’s Android and Wear operating systems. “Interoperability should be a standard merger condition whenever any of the main tech platforms acquire companies, if the merger is going to be permitted,” said Hubbard.
Sally Hubbard was quoted [[link removed]] in Wired on the topic of potentially banning targeted advertising to stop the spread of disinformation and manipulation. “Today’s digital advertising infrastructure creates disturbing new opportunities for political manipulation and other forms of antidemocratic strategic communication,” Hubbard said.
Sally Hubbard was quoted [[link removed]] in Broadband Breakfast in an article covering the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights hearing on March 10. Hubbard’s comments on Google during her testimony before the subcommittee were mentioned, as Hubbard noted that Google has made “hundreds of acquisitions, many of which were illegal under the Clayton Antitrust Act.”
We appreciate your readership. Please consider making a contribution to support the continued publication of this newsletter.
DONATE [[link removed]] 📈 VITAL STAT: $121 billion
The value [[link removed]] of the recently approved mega-merger between manufacturing conglomerate UTC and the defense contractor Raytheon.
📚 WHAT WE'RE READING:
“ Rethinking the Knowledge Problem in an Era of Corporate Gigantism [[link removed]]” (Media Rep, Frank Pasquale): Discusses how the difficulty of aggregating diffuse private knowledge, coined by Fredrick Hayek as the “knowledge problem,” was once a barrier to central planning. In today’s age of artificial intelligence and mass surveillance, however, large corporations aggregate massive amounts of user data, so now these corporations are increasingly able to function as central planners, albeit largely or entirely outside the control of the public.
“ The Common Ownership Trilemma [[link removed]]” (University of Chicago Law Review, José Azar): Argues that an economy cannot achieve portfolio diversification, shareholder representation, and competition at the same time. As a consequence, there is a tendency toward a concentration of common stockholders among competitors.
Open Markets Employment Opportunities
You can find the full job listings here [[link removed]].
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Written by: Barry Lynn, Phil Longman, Michael Bluhm, and Daniel A. Hanley
Edited by: Barry Lynn, Phil Longman, Michael Bluhm, Daniel A. Hanley, and Udit Thakur
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