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Eakinomics: The
Biden Competition Executive Order
On Friday President Biden signed his highly publicized executive
order (EO) “promoting competition in the American economy.”
The EO has the feel of an elementary school science fair with no
theme and exhibits of widely varying quality. Its fact sheet brags
of “72 initiatives by more than a dozen federal agencies to promptly tackle
some of the most pressing competition problems across our economy,” but they
range from the insignificant (making it easier to get a refund when in-flight
wifi does not work), to the laughable (“Directs HHS to issue a
comprehensive plan within 45 days to combat high prescription drug prices and
price gouging”), to the breathtaking (challenging “prior bad mergers that
past Administrations did not previously challenge”). Nevertheless, the EO
should be neither dismissed nor ignored.
First, as noted by AAF’s Daniel Bosch, the EO itself further erodes the
autonomy of the so-called independent agencies. In
particular, it “is the broadest and most specific example in recent history
of a president seeking certain policy outcomes from independent agencies.”
The administration is evidently unfamiliar with the quaint notion that
independent agencies get to decide for themselves what policy should be.
Second, the notion that the antitrust agencies (Department of Justice and
Federal Trade Commission) can revisit mergers that passed muster in the past
is an economic earthquake because the administration is dead set on changing
the standards for evaluating mergers, acquisitions, and competition policy.
For decades, across the ideological spectrum and in the agencies and the
courts, decisions have been guided by the consumer welfare standard.
Decisions ranging from regulation to merger review were guided by whether
careful analysis indicated that they would enhance consumer welfare or not.
The administration has decided that big is bad – no need for all that
difficult analysis and troublesome facts – and simply assumes that
greater concentration prevails across the economy and that it automatically
means economic bad news. This is a mistake. Massachusetts Institute of
Technology industrial organization expert Nancy Rose finds that
“rising national concentration is not mirrored at more local levels, where
measures of concentration have been declining over time.” Put differently,
one really needs to do due diligence and find the facts.
Moreover, “highly aggregated measures of concentration across industries,
which are used in many of the most provocative studies, cannot be used to
draw conclusions about concentration dynamics due to a host of methodological
challenges. Instead, industry-level studies are necessary to accurately
assess causal relationships. These more appropriately modeled studies
generally find no direct relationship between changes in concentration
measures and changes in market competitiveness or performance.” Put
differently, one really needs to do the analysis.
Reading through the 72 proposed actions, one can find some ideas that appear
to have merit, some that appear to be real stinkers, and the remainder
scattered in between. But there appears to be no desire to actually do the
work necessary to tell them apart.
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