National Post

Antitrust revamp targets ‘too big to fix’ deals

‘Our laws and our enforcers both need to be as sophistica­ted as today’s corporate titans’

- David mclaughlin and b brody en

Senator Amy Klobuchar is proposing a sweeping reform to U.S. antitrust laws that would curtail the power of dominant companies across the economy by making it harder for them to buy competitor­s and flex their muscles over markets.

Klobuchar, who is the incoming chairwoman of the Senate’s panel on antitrust law and competitio­n, introduced legislatio­n that would change current merger law to make it easier to stop deals in court and target conduct by dominant companies that thwarts competitio­n from rivals.

“Our laws and our enforcers both need to be as sophistica­ted as today’s corporate titans,” the Minnesota Democrat said in an interview. “We often talk about firms being too big to fail. A question for modern antitrust enforcemen­t is whether some mergers are too big to fix.”

Klobuchar’s past antitrust efforts failed to advance in the Republican-controlled Senate, but now Democrats are looking to capitalize on their party’s control of Congress and the White House to put more teeth into competitio­n laws. Progressiv­es have come to see competitio­n policy as a mechanism to combat economic woes like income inequality and stagnant wages that some see as tied to increased concentrat­ion across industries.

The bill’s co-sponsors are Democrats Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Ed Markey of Massachuse­tts, and Brian Schatz of Hawaii. Democrats will need 60 votes to pass legislatio­n in the Senate, forcing them to secure Republican support for any bill. Yet some Republican­s have said they back antitrust reform.

In the House, four Republican­s on the House antitrust panel, including Ken Buck of Colorado, have said they support changes to merger law to make it harder for companies to win approval for deals.

In many cases, they said, the evidence required to block mergers is “insurmount­able.”

Klobuchar, who campaigned for the democratic presidenti­al nomination last year, said she expects to get republican support because there are bipartisan concerns about the power of technology companies. republican­s also have supported another element of Klobuchar’s bill — increased funding for the Justice department’s Antitrust division and the Federal Trade Commission.

“you cannot take on the likes of the biggest companies in the world,” she said, “by doing things with bandaids and duct tape.”

Monopoly cases were almost unheard of until last year when the government sued Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Facebook Inc.

“The overall result is an approach to antitrust that has significan­tly diverged from the laws that Congress enacted,” the House antitrust panel said in a report released last year.

Klobuchar’s legislatio­n would be the first overhaul of the basic legal standard used to judge deals since the primary u.s. merger law was passed more than a century ago. Court decisions have interprete­d the 1914 Clayton Act to prohibit mergers that “substantia­lly” lessen competitio­n.

The bill would amend the law to make it easier to stop deals by forbidding takeovers that “create an appreciabl­e risk of materially lessening competitio­n,” where “materially” would be defined as anything more than a trivial amount.

Her proposal would create additional hurdles by categorizi­ng certain deals as illegal unless the companies can show there is no risk of reduced competitio­n.

That’s a subtle but significan­t shift because under current law the onus is on antitrust enforcers to convince courts that a deal is illegal. Klobuchar’s bill would place the burden on companies.

deals presumed to be illegal would be acquisitio­ns of competitor­s or emerging competitor­s by a company with a market share of 50 per cent or more; takeovers of “maverick” firms that are shaking up industries; transactio­ns valued at more than us$5 billion; and acquisitio­ns of us$50 million or more by companies valued at more than us$100 billion.

Klobuchar also is proposing giving antitrust enforcers new tools to bring monopoly cases.

Her legislatio­n would prohibit conduct that poses an “appreciabl­e risk of harming competitio­n.” The bill would authorize the FTC and the Justice department to seek civil fines against companies for monopoly abuse.

Her legislatio­n doesn’t go as far as recommenda­tions last year by the House antitrust panel, which is led by representa­tive david Cicilline, a rhode Island democrat.

That report, which accused tech companies of abusing their market power, recommende­d Congress consider legislatio­n that would prevent tech companies from owning different lines of businesses, which could lead to a mandate to break them up.

 ?? TOM WILLIAMS / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? u.s. Senator amy Klobuchar is the incoming chairwoman of the Senate panel on antitrust law and competitio­n.
TOM WILLIAMS / POOL / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES u.s. Senator amy Klobuchar is the incoming chairwoman of the Senate panel on antitrust law and competitio­n.
 ?? Brendan Mcdermid / reuters FILES ?? “You cannot take on the likes of the biggest companies in the world,” Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar said,
“by doing things with Band-aids and duct tape.”
Brendan Mcdermid / reuters FILES “You cannot take on the likes of the biggest companies in the world,” Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar said, “by doing things with Band-aids and duct tape.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada