From Barry C. Lynn, Open Markets Institute <[email protected]>
Subject The Corner Newsletter: Open Markets Explains Why the Justice Department Should Stop a Proposed Merger Among Giant Publishers, and We Discuss Our New Report on Vaccines, Which Lays Out a Plan for the Biden Administration to Stop the Next Pandemic
Date December 3, 2020 8:30 PM
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Welcome to The Corner. In this issue, we explain why the Justice Department should stop a proposed merger among giant publishers, and we discuss our new report on vaccines, which lays out a plan for the Biden administration to stop the next pandemic by reforming the vaccine production system.

Sen. Booker Joins Open Markets and Family Farm Action to Condemn Ag Monopolies

Sen. Cory Booker praised a landmark report on consolidation in the U.S. food and farming economy, co-produced by Family Farm Action Alliance and Open Markets, at an online event to mark the report’s release on Nov. 19.

“Consolidation in our food system is a grave threat to our family farmers and rural communities,” Booker said, adding that there is an “urgent need for Congress to take action to address corporate concentration and create a food system that is rooted in fairness and opportunity for all,” Mother Jones [[link removed]], The Counter [[link removed]], Ag Daily [[link removed]], Insider NJ [[link removed]], and Tri-State Livestock News [[link removed]] covered the event and the report.

The report, titled “ The [[link removed]] Food System: Concentration and Its Impacts [[link removed]],” was written by Dr. Mary Hendrickson, Dr. Phil Howard, Emily Miller, and Dr. Douglas Constance. Dr. Hendrickson, a rural sociologist and leading food system scholar, discussed at the event the implications of a concentrated agrifood system. “Even with my years of examining consolidation in the food system, I am profoundly distressed by its ecological waste, the erosion of communities, and its callous treatment of human beings,” she said.

The report provides new data on our overly concentrated food supply chain. In the U.S., the top four corporations control 80% of soybean processing, 73% of beef processing, and 67% of pork processing. The report also made clear that such figures actually understate the problem, as the processors often enjoy strong monopolies across entire regions of the country.

The report calls for policies to democratize the food system through antitrust enforcement, prioritizing racial equity, transforming and redirecting production subsidies, and empowering alternative and localized food systems and economies.

Open Markets Demands DOJ Stop Bertelsmann’s Plan to Buy Simon & Schuster

Penguin Random House, which is owned by the German publishing conglomerate Bertelsmann and is the largest trade publisher in the country, announced plans on Nov. 25 to buy Simon & Schuster from ViacomCBS for $2.175 billion.

The deal would concentrate too much power over American authors and readers in the hands of a single corporation, so Open Markets called on [[link removed]] the Department of Justice to block the proposed merger. Open Markets’ statement was covered by The Wall Street Journal [[link removed]], The Washington Times [[link removed]], Publishers Weekly [[link removed]], The Los Angeles Times [[link removed]], MarketWatch [[link removed]], and The American Booksellers Association [[link removed]].

“Bertelsmann’s plan to take control of Simon & Schuster poses multiple dangers to American democracy and to the interests of America’s authors and readers,” said Open Markets Institute Executive Director Barry Lynn. “The deal will make it harder for authors and editors to attract the support they need to research, write, and prepare the sorts of books Americans need to address the many serious political and economic crises we now face. It will also threaten the ability of independent booksellers — who are already reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic and other pressures — to stay in business.”

Through the 1970s, the U.S. publishing industry was home to more than 20 major publishers. By 2013, consolidation unleashed by the Reagan administration had reduced that number to six. If approved, the takeover of Simon & Schuster would bring three of these six under the control of a single corporation and would increase pressure on the remaining independents to consolidate.

Sally Hubbard, Open Markets’ director of enforcement strategy, explained to The Washington Post [[link removed]] how consolidation in the publishing industry erodes freedom of expression. “Diversity of speech and a marketplace of ideas are incredibly important,” she said. “You start having a less pluralistic society, more concentration of ideas through fewer gatekeepers.”

The root cause of consolidation among publishers is Amazon’s dominant position among booksellers. Amazon’s monopoly allows it to dictate terms to publishers, who react by consolidating. “That’s an extortive and extortionary relationship,” Hubbard said, “not a healthy marketplace.”

To solve the problem, the Justice Department needs to address both the harmful consolidation among publishers and Amazon’s pernicious monopoly.

New Open Markets Report: How Monopolists Raided the U.S. Vaccine System, and How Biden Can Defeat Next Pandemic

Pfizer [[link removed]] and Moderna [[link removed]] recently announced extremely promising trial results for COVID-19 vaccine candidates, and millions of Americans are now looking forward to resuming their pre-pandemic lives. But as Open Markets explains in a new report, production of enough vaccine to protect the entire U.S. population will take much [[link removed]] longer [[link removed]] than it could have, because monopolists have degraded vaccine manufacturing capacity in recent decades.

In the Nov. 16 report, “ Corporate [[link removed]] Monopoly and the Decline of America’s Vaccine Industry [[link removed]],” Open Markets presents a comprehensive history of U.S. vaccine production and lays out how the Biden administration should fix the vaccine system and defeat the next pandemic. The report was covered by Axios [[link removed]], Fast Company [[link removed]], and Common Dreams [[link removed]].

For much of the 20th century, America’s vaccine system was the best in the world, thanks largely to strong government support. Since the overthrow of traditional anti-monopoly law in the 1980s, however, monopolists have concentrated control over the production of most vaccines and ancillary components. As a result, prices have skyrocketed, even for the most basic childhood vaccines, and many diseases we thought we had eradicated long ago have returned.

The report makes clear that new legislation is needed. Prosecutors can begin to reverse the problem simply be enforcing the law as it was originally written.

🔊 ANTI-MONOPOLY RISING:

The Department of Justice filed suit against the National Association of Realtors (NAR) on Nov. 19, alleging that the NAR had violated antitrust law by adopting “a series of rules, policies, and practices” that contributed to “a lessening of competition among real estate brokers to the detriment of American home buyers.” The department alleges that the NAR prohibits affiliates from informing prospective homebuyers about the amount of commissions that brokers earn on the sale of a home, which amounts to a restraint of free trade. ( HousingWire [[link removed]])

Rep. Joe Neguse, D-Colo., called last week for a probe into how federal regulators evaluate pharmaceutical mergers, signaling lawmakers’ growing interest in investigating the relationship between rising drug prices and increased consolidation throughout the industry. ( CNBC [[link removed]])

📝 WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO:

Garphil Julien published a piece in The American Prospect [[link removed]] about the collapse of the U.S. retail sector under combined assault from Amazon, private equity, and real estate conglomerates. “Amazon is killing off much of remaining retail through [[link removed]] predatory pricing [[link removed]], anti-competitive tactics, and its hardening monopoly over e-commerce,” Julien wrote.

Claire Kelloway published a piece in Civil Eats [[link removed]] showing how California’s Proposition 22 allows food delivery companies to avoid paying employee benefits and protections. ”It still remains to be seen if other states will be able to do what California could not and stand up for food workers against powerful tech titans,” Kelloway wrote.

Daniel Hanley published a piece in Slate [[link removed]] urging the Biden administration to appoint commissioners to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) who are committed to banning exclusionary agreements, in order to restore the right to repair. He was also quoted in the Society for Human Resource Management [[link removed]] making this argument.

Sally Hubbard published a piece in CNN Business [[link removed]] asserting that the government can help make the U.S. more resilient after the pandemic by redistributing economic power and stopping monopolies. She was interviewed by KSRO [[link removed]] on the same topic.

Barry Lynn participated in a panel discussion hosted by The New York Times‘ DealBook, along with Rep. David Cicilline, Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Makan Delrahim, FTC Commissioner Noah Feldman, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, author Shoshanna Zuboff, and Lina Khan, a House staff member and former Open Markets fellow.

Sally Hubbard spoke on KPFA [[link removed]] about what the Biden administration can do now on Big Tech, monopolies, and antitrust.

Sally Hubbard was quoted in One Zero [[link removed]] and The Markup [[link removed]] commenting on Google’s practices for giving preference to pages using its mobile page technology, known as AMP. “I did always think AMP posed antitrust concerns,” said Sally Hubbard, author of the book “Monopolies Suck” and an antitrust expert with the Open Markets Institute. “It’s, ‘If you want to show up on the top of the search results, you have to play by our rules, you have to use AMP.’”

Sally Hubbard was quoted in Forbes [[link removed]] explaining how the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) lawsuit against Google represents a landmark. “If the DOJ and other states didn’t bring this case against Microsoft in the ‘90s, there probably wouldn’t be a Google today,” Hubbard said. “Internet Explorer could have become a monopoly search browser.”

Sally Hubbard was featured in a Yahoo! Finance [[link removed]] broadcast to discuss her book, Monopolies Suck, and to share thoughts about the outlook for Section 230, before the Facebook and Twitter CEOs testified before Congress. “What we really should be focused on is how to deconcentrate these platforms’ control over speech. That is the one point that both sides could agree upon,” she said. She also discussed her book on C-S [[link removed]] PAN [[link removed]] and WAMC [[link removed]].

Sandeep Vaheesan was mentioned in Vox [[link removed]] for his list of actions that the Biden administration could take to tackle corporate power even with a Republican-controlled Senate. “Even without new legislation, the next president can limit corporate power with the awesome anti-monopoly authorities already vested in the DOJ, FTC, USDA, and other federal agencies.”

Claire Kelloway and Barry Lynn were quoted in The Daily Beast [[link removed]] commenting on Open Markets Institute’s agricultural policy memo, which details the Democratic party’s history of failing to protect rural America from agricultural monopolies and which proposes a list of policy solutions for the incoming administration. ”Absent action now, the problem will only grow in the years ahead, making it that much harder to capture the Senate and to fix the fundamental problems in America’s economy and society,” the memo said.

Daniel Hanley was quoted in Washington Monthly [[link removed]] noting why Spotify’s purchase of Megaphone is concerning. “We’re witnessing the foreclosure of this really dynamic industry that’s open and accessible,” said Hanley. We’re “really seeing it consolidated into the hands of just a few players.”

Johnny Ryan was mentioned in Private News Online [[link removed]] for opposing Google’s use of real-time bidding systems for online ads in the UK and Ireland because of its privacy breaches.

Open Markets was mentioned in W [[link removed]] IRED [[link removed]] calling for [[link removed]]antitrust enforcement in the U.S., and Open Markets was mentioned in Th [[link removed]] e [[link removed]] In [[link removed]] de [[link removed]] pe [[link removed]] n [[link removed]] den [[link removed]] t [[link removed]] [[link removed]]and HR Digest [[link removed]] for our Amazon worker surveillance report.

Open Markets signed a letter [[link removed]] organized by Food & Water Action and Family Farm Action recommending Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, for the position of secretary of agriculture. It was covered by Mother Jones [[link removed]], Newsbreak [[link removed]], and Common Dreams.

Open Markets signed a letter [[link removed]] spearheaded by the Revolving Door Project asking President-elect Joe Biden to take a hard line against the influence of individuals with close ties to Google. The letter was covered by Business Insider [[link removed]], The Associated Press [[link removed]], The Observer [[link removed]], The Boston Herald [[link removed]], ABC News [[link removed]], and MSN [[link removed]].

Open Markets also signed a broader letter urging both the Biden administration and Democratic senators and senators-elect to reject the influence of Big Tech companies on the new administration. The letter was covered by Reuters [[link removed]], Business Insider [[link removed]], MSN [[link removed]], Yahoo! News [[link removed]], MarketWatch [[link removed]], Common Dreams [[link removed]], PYMNTS [[link removed]], and Morningstar [[link removed]].

Open Markets [[link removed]] welcomed globally renowned financial journalist Rana Foroohar to our board of directors.

We appreciate your readership. Please consider making a contribution to support the continued publication of this newsletter.

DONATE [[link removed]] 📈 VITAL STAT: $500 million

The amount [[link removed]] of money raised by Liberty Media owner and founder John Malone and CEO Greg Maffei to create a special purpose acquisition company to pursue a merger in the media, telecom, and entertainment industry. Liberty Media has increased its influence in the media industry over the past few years, with controlling stakes in Sirius XM and Pandora, a 50% stake in iHeartMedia, and a 33% stake in Live Nation Entertainment.

📚 WHAT WE'RE READING:

“ The Political Face of Antitrust [[link removed]],” by Spencer Weber Waller, Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial, and Commercial Law: Waller, one of the premier antitrust scholars in the United States, provides an important and well-reasoned review of the rise of antitrust as a central topic in public discourse.

“ Monopolization Remedies and Data Privacy [[link removed]],” by Erika Douglas, Virginia Journal of Law and Technology: Douglas argues that antitrust analysis should consider effects on user privacy when courts or enforcers consider and implement remedies to monopolization cases.

BARRY LYNN’S

NEW BOOK

Liberty From All Masters

The New American Autocracy vs. The Will of the People

St. Martin’s Press has published Open Markets Executive Director Barry Lynn’s new book, Liberty [[link removed]] f [[link removed]] rom All Masters [[link removed]].

Liberty is Lynn’s first book since 2010’s Cornered. In his new work, Lynn warns of the threat to liberty and democracy posed by Google, Amazon, and Facebook, because of their ability to manipulate the flows of information and business in America. Barry then details how Americans over the course of two centuries built a “System of Liberty,” and shows how we Americans can put this system to work again today. Lynn also offers a hopeful vision for how we can use anti-monopoly law to rebuild our society and our democracy from the ground up.

Liberty from All Masters has already made waves for its empowering call to restore democracy by resurrecting forgotten tools and institutions. “Very few thinkers in recent years have done more to shift debate in Washington than Barry Lynn. In Liberty from All Masters, he proves himself as a lyrical theorist and a bold interpreter of history. This book is an elegant summoning of a forgotten tradition that can help the nation usher in a new freedom,” says Franklin Foer, author of World Without Mind and national correspondent for The Atlantic.

You can order your copy of Lynn’s book here [[link removed]].

SALLY HUBBARD’S

NEW BOOK

MONOPOLIES SUCK

7 Ways Big Corporations Rule Your Life and How to Take Back Control

Simon & Schuster published Monopolies Suck [[link removed]] by Sally Hubbard on Oct. 27. The book is the first by Hubbard, who is Open Markets’ director of enforcement strategy. Hubbard examines how modern monopolies rob Americans of a healthy food supply, the ability to care for the sick, and a habitable planet, because monopolies use business practices that deplete rather than generate. Monopolists also threaten fair elections, our free press, our privacy, and, ultimately, the American Dream, Hubbard shows. In Monopolies Suck, Hubbard reminds readers that antitrust enforcers already have the tools to dismantle corporate power and that decisive action must be taken before monopolies undermine our economy and democracy for generations to come. In Monopolies Suck, Sally provides an important new view of America’s monopoly crisis and of the political and economic harms of concentrated private power. Order your copy here [[link removed]].

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Written and edited by: Barry Lynn, Michael Bluhm, Jackie Filson, Daniel A. Hanley, Udit Thakur, and Garphil Julien

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