No images? Click here Welcome to The Corner. In this issue, we discuss our response to the criticisms regarding a merger ban during the COVID-19 pandemic, commend newly proposed bills to ban micro-targeting, and highlight the release of professor John Kwoka’s latest book. To read previous editions of The Corner, click here. As Big Tech Feasts on Vulnerable Firms, Merger Ban Needed More Than Ever Even though the total number of mergers in 2020 through late May was down about 50% compared to last year, Big Tech is going on an acquisition spree at a rate not seen since 2015. Reports in the Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal make clear that these dominant corporations are taking advantage of the pandemic to acquire rivals or strategic targets weakened by the sharp economic downturn. The flurry of announcements powerfully demonstrates the need for a ban on mergers for the duration of the economic crisis, as Open Markets Institute proposed on March 21. Recent examples include Facebook’s announcement of plans to spend $400 million to fully acquire Giphy, which allows users to share animated images. Uber, meanwhile, has confirmed it is interested in buying Grubhub for a reported $4.5 billion. Amazon, meanwhile, the largest e-commerce company in the United States, is reportedly in discussions to purchase AMC Theaters, the world’s largest theater chain, Zoox, an autonomous-vehicle technology company, and JC Penney, one of the largest American department store chains. According to the Financial Times, Big Tech has announced 19 own acquisitions since January, the sector’s highest tally since 2015. In March, Open Markets called for a ban on all mergers involving corporations with more than $100 million in annual revenue or market capitalization for the duration of the COVID-19 crisis. In that letter, we argued that the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), and other competition law enforcement agencies cannot effectively evaluate mergers at a time when most government offices are shuttered. More fundamentally, we argued that the ban is needed to prevent a wholesale concentration of additional power by corporations that already dominate or largely dominate their industries. We noted that uncontrolled consolidation in this environment would likely result in the unnecessary firing of thousands of employees, the unnecessary closure of many otherwise viable businesses, and 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. Shortly after the release of our call for a moratorium, Rep. David Cicilline (RI-1), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14) proposed draft legislation that closely mirrors our proposal. The proposed ban has been criticized by Jason Furman, former deputy director of the National Economic Council under President Barack Obama, and Makan Delrahim, the head of the Justice Department’s antitrust division. Former Vice President Joe Biden, when asked about the proposal, answered that he would want the Justice Department to take a “hard look” at whether mergers increased competition and fostered growth. Of the recent mergers, Facebook’s acquisition of Giphy presents the most significant concerns. By acquiring Giphy, Facebook will extend its hoard of data to include Giphy’s 200 million daily users and deepen its connection to the various applications that have integrated Giphy. Uber’s proposed acquisition of Grubhub is also deeply troubling. Such a deal would give Uber control of 50% of the U.S. market for meal delivery. The rumors surrounding Amazon’s proposed acquisitions are particularly worrisome, as the corporation has profited immensely since the onset of the pandemic, while many of its rivals have stumbled or gone out of business.
Open Markets Applauds Principles of Rep. Cicilline’s and Rep. Eshoo’s Bills Limiting Micro-Targeting
Rep. David Cicilline (RI-1) and Rep. Anna Eshoo (CA-18) this week introduced separate bills to limit micro-targeting, a form of advertising that allows advertisers to target ads to users based on users’ actions online. In a statement, Open Markets Director of Enforcement Strategy Sally Hubbard said that the bills are “critical first steps to preserving the integrity of our elections and stopping the manipulation of American voters.” Hubbard submitted a letter in April to the House Subcommittee on Antitrust about the dangers that micro-targeting poses to democracy and individual freedom. Hubbard explained that platforms such as Google and Facebook surveil their users and then allow disinformation agents to target propaganda at users based on comprehensive and intimate data profiles. Foreign agents can easily interfere with our elections because of Facebook's and Google’s targeted advertising business models, Hubbard wrote. “These grave threats to our democracy are not inevitable, but rather result from business choices that prioritize profits over free and fair elections,” she wrote. In her letter, Hubbard called for a ban on all targeted advertising and, at minimum, a ban on micro-targeted ads. The Open Markets Institute commends both Rep. Cicilline’s and Rep. Eshoo’s bills as important advances in the right direction, and Open Markets applauds the lawmakers for taking much needed action on this issue. Professor John Kwoka’s New Book Offers Diagnosis and Cure for Merger Ills
John Kwoka, a professor at Northeastern University and a member of Open Markets Institute’s academic advisory board, has published a new book titled Controlling Mergers and Market Power: A Program for Reviving Antitrust in America. In his new book, Kwoka explains how specific policy choices have led to the current feeble merger policy in the United States. Kwoka details how antitrust enforcers failed to enforce merger guidelines, failed to challenge large mergers, and implemented remedies with “dubious effectiveness.” Kwoka argues that the failure of today’s merger policy has led to markets that are drastically more concentrated and controlled by dominant firms. To remedy this failure, Kwoka provides 44 policy recommendations that represent a comprehensive guide to invigorating merger policy. The recommendations include a renewed reliance on the structural presumption, a new definition of an anti-competitive mergers, greater scrutiny of mergers that create barriers to entry, and a reduced use of the current, toothless remedies to anti-competitive mergers. The new work is a comprehensive follow-up to Kwoka’s previous, groundbreaking book, Mergers, Merger Controls, and Remedies, in which Kwoka systematically demonstrated how American merger policy failed to lower prices, to increase output, or to increase competition. Kwoka’s new book can be purchased from the Competition Policy International website.
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