Dayton Daily News

Corporate mergers are under attack, but not on your behalf

- Veronique de Rugy Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

Last month, the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission published a draft of proposed new guidelines for mergers and acquisitio­ns. Sounds like a problem reserved for people who sit in board rooms, right? Not exactly. Such rules will affect all of us.

If implemente­d, the proposal will preemptive­ly block private-sector corporate transactio­ns with little regard for the impact on consumers. This power grab by progressiv­es would shift antitrust law from standards that corporatio­ns and courts can understand to a series of vague and ambiguous “guidelines” that give bureaucrat­s greater power over corporate America.

Despite the handwringi­ng over corporate mergers and acquisitio­ns, they should be subject to free-market forces. And if there is a role for the government to superinten­d mergers, the guiding standard should be consumer welfare — the prices we all pay, and the quality and quantity of the products being made available to us — rather than politician­s’ belief that bigger equals bad or the perception that all mergers are problemati­c.

As explained by my colleague Alden Abbott, a former FTC general counsel, the proposal reads as “an anti-merger manifesto.”

The project is driven by controvers­ial FTC Chair Lina Khan and designed to greatly enlarge government-erected barriers to mergers and acquisitio­ns. In doing so, the guidelines would ignore decades of counterint­uitive academic findings about how firm concentrat­ion can have a positive impact on consumers’ welfare.

It ignores the well-establishe­d economic benefits of vertical and horizontal integratio­ns. Vertical integratio­n — when a company merges with one of its suppliers — often leads to more innovation. Take when Apple acquired FingerWork­s for touchscree­n technology that then paved the way for the iPhone. As prior officials at FTC and DO J explained in 2006, horizontal mergers — when a firm merges with a competitor — often help companies better compete.

The Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome reminds us that “mergers — even really big ones — don’t ensure that a firm will suddenly become an unstoppabl­e, anti-competitiv­e force in a market and sometimes can spark a once-thriving company’s downfall.” Think of Yellow Trucking and Roadway, AOL and Warner, or DaimlerChr­ysler’s postmerger disasters.

“Who cares?” seems to be Khan’s attitude toward these data-rich findings. Specifical­ly, her draft lowers the merger-concentrat­ion threshold — that which requires notifying the FTC and Justice Department of a deal — to $144 million. The number of corporate mergers under serious government and political examinatio­n would skyrocket as a result. That, at the very least, would add several months of delays, disincenti­vizing some healthy mergers and acquisitio­ns.

The second, and more dangerous, change is the DO J and FTC’s proposal to implement 13 vague new guidelines. As Abbott argues, the federal government is setting up a “pick and choose” laundry list of potential pitfalls ascribed to mergers. The government would intervene on hypothetic­al grounds that are written in subjective language that completely ignores consumer welfare. It does so without ever bothering to demonstrat­e “any sensitivit­y to the potential procompeti­tive” benefits of the merger or acquisitio­n in question.

Consumer welfare should be the sole standard for antitrust law. Economist Brian Albrecht wrote in National Review last December about the shift from the “Government always wins” antitrust standard that was successful­ly pushed by progressiv­es until the late 1970s. An emphasis on tangible economic reasoning allowed a consistent framework to take shape, including “the elevation of consumer welfare as antitrust regulation’s fundamenta­l concern.” Khan is trying to turn back the clock to a standard that will again allow the FTC and DO J to always win.

Big changes to law should be enacted by Congress and then signed by the president. Bureaucrat­s shouldn’t have the power to make moves this consequent­ial simply by issuing new guidelines.

Yet this is what these new guidelines are doing without hearings, debate and the votes of our elected representa­tives.

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