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Baker on the Dueling Bush Administration Antitrust Agencies

Jonathan Baker (American) has a column at The New Republic focusing on a different aspect of the FTC vs. DOJ scuffles over antitrust policy. Baker claims that the DOJ is engaging in what he describes as “deregulatory radicalism that allows monopolies to spin out of control,” while he is largely supportive of FTC policies. Baker sees the growing rift between the agencies as one of ideologies — one mainstream and one radical:

This anti-enforcement stance has no recent precedent, except perhaps at the same agency during Reagan’s second term. In fact, the other U.S. antitrust agency, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), has been noticeably at odds with Justice–even though both are run by Bush appointees. This interagency clash pits mainstream conservative defenders of traditional competition against radical non-interventionist advocates of broad marketplace rights for big business–and it proves that in competition policy, as elsewhere, the Bush administration has gone sadly astray.

Contrary to my recent post taking the FTC to task for appearing to abandon the economic roots of modern antitrust analysis in the recent Section 2 Report Statement from Commissioners Rosch, Harbour & Leibowitz (but not the Chairman), Baker says its the FTC who has got it right and the DOJ who consistently pushes misguided non-interventionist policies. The evidence? Baker lists the Microsoft settlement, the DOJ’s decision not to challenge Whirlpool/Maytag, more lenient merger enforcement, Justice advocating that the Supreme Court adopt legal rules that favor defendants in monopoly cases, and of course, the spat over the recent Section 2 Report.

This sounds like a long list of things DOJ gotten wrong. But one should be careful in antitrust analysis not to conflate activity level with quality of enforcement in terms of consume welfare or some other quality metric. Let’s look at the evidence a bit more carefully with an eye toward distinguishing between claims that the DOJ is a less “active” agency from claims that they less vigorously pursue consumer interests.

In any event, read Baker’s article.  While I disagree on the characterization of the DOJ as “deregulatory radicals” and on the description of the quality of evidence supporting that description, it is a thought provoking and important column.