From Roosevelt Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Roosevelt Rundown: The True Costs of Corporate Markups
Date May 3, 2024 8:02 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Corporate profiteering is bad for consumers, workers, and business. Here’s what government can do about it.

The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.
View this in your browser and share with your friends. ([link removed])
[link removed]


** Taking on Unfair Corporate Pricing Practices
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
(Photo by Scott Olson / Getty Images)
Corporate profiteering is hurting consumers, workers, and businesses. On Thursday, Roosevelt’s Alí R. Bustamante testified ([link removed]) before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs about how corporate pricing strategies have fueled inflation—and how the government can restrict these unfair practices.

In industries where corporations have gained significant market power over the years, markups—the difference between the prices consumers pay for goods or services and how much it costs to make or provide them—have ballooned. Recent analysis ([link removed]) from Bustamante and Roosevelt’s Ira Regmi found that average markups grew from 48 percent above cost in 2014 to 69 percent above cost in 2023—and that growth is being driven by a few large corporations. Inflation is driven in part by these markups, and research has shown ([link removed]) that increased markups also lead to a decline in workers’ wages.

“There are great economic benefits to be gained by reining in markups and unfair corporate pricing strategies,” Bustamante said, “including lower prices in the short term and a more competitive economic environment for businesses and workers in the medium and long term.” Government can make this happen by strengthening antitrust laws, restricting dynamic pricing, and enforcing rules against deceptive pricing practices.

Watch the hearing ([link removed]) , and read Bustamante’s full testimony ([link removed]) .


** Promoting Supply Chain Resilience in a Decarbonizing World
------------------------------------------------------------
“Much of the current trade tool kit was designed for a different point in history with a different energy system,” Roosevelt’s Todd N. Tucker said on Thursday ([link removed]) at the Office of the US Trade Representative’s public hearing on promoting supply chain resilience. Tucker discussed three intertwined challenges that the US faces in crafting its trade and investment policy in the face of supply shocks and a changing climate.

First, the climate crisis requires government to balance competing objectives—the crucial imperative of transitioning to a green economy, and the need to do so in a just and equitable manner. Second, the government must incentivize the private sector to invest in clean energy production, the social gains of which outweigh the profit gains to producers. Third, the US must ensure economic resilience at home while navigating complex geopolitical relations.

Read Tucker’s full testimony ([link removed]) .


** Join the Roosevelt Institute Team
------------------------------------------------------------
The Roosevelt Institute is hiring! If you’re interested in joining our community of thinkers, advocates, and champions of a more democratic economy, check out our latest career opportunities:
* Principal Economist ([link removed])
* Director, Race and Democracy ([link removed])


** What We're Talking About
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]
Share this tweet ([link removed])


** What We're Reading
------------------------------------------------------------
The Tradwife's Catch-22 ([link removed]) - by Roosevelt’s Shahrzad Shams - Ms. Magazine

The Next Big Energy Fight: Defense Production Act Renewal ([link removed]) - feat. Roosevelt’s Todd N. Tucker - E&E News

Is Our Concept of Freedom All Wrong? ([link removed]) - feat. Roosevelt Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz - Freakonomics [podcast]

Workers Taking Center Stage Is Latest Sign US Is in New Antitrust Era ([link removed]) - Axios

50 Years of Tax Cuts for the Rich Failed to Trickle Down, Economics Study Says ([link removed]) - CBS News

============================================================


Join the Conversation

** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** Update your preferences ([link removed])
. Tell us which emails you want to receive!

If you are interested in supporting the Roosevelt Institute, ** click here ([link removed])
.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Institute, all rights reserved.

570 Lexington Ave, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10022

rooseveltinstitute.org

If you would like to unsubscribe from this list, ** click here ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis