The
American Economic Liberties Project, an influential
Washington-based anti-monopoly group, issued a report with
guidance for antitrust enforcers in the next administration. The
group is led by Sarah Miller, who is working with
President-elect Joe Biden's transition team and has been
instrumental in making antitrust enforcement against Big Tech a
mainstream issue.
The report's recommendations offer a glimpse into the thinking
that could influence future policymaking under the Biden
administration.
The group urged that the U.S. Justice Department make clear it
will continue antitrust action against Google by expanding the
scope of litigation beyond search to maps, travel and its app
store.
The Justice Department sued Google on Oct. 20, accusing the $1
trillion company of dominating search and advertising. In
December, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sued Facebook
saying the company used a "buy or bury" strategy to hurt rivals.
The report calls on the Biden administration to appoint
aggressive Justice Department and FTC antitrust enforcers and
urges Biden's attorney general nominee, Merrick Garland, to
"publicly commit to seeking a Google breakup."
"The anti-monopoly movement is really young...We wanted to lay
out a vision that people in a new administration can rally
around and can use as a clear roadmap for not only what's
possible but what's necessary," Miller told Reuters.
Backers of this view want antitrust enforcement to move away
from the prevailing standard which only looks at whether
consumers are benefiting from lower prices.
The report encourages antitrust agencies to challenge mergers
involving a powerful buyer and calls for regulators to stop
entering settlements with companies that do not require them to
admit wrongdoing.
Among other recommendations it wants to do away with non-compete
clauses in work arrangements and end conflicts of interest by
stopping companies from operating and competing on the same
platform. For example, Amazon.com Inc operates a third-party,
seller-driven marketplace where it also competes.
The report also urges the FTC to prioritize bringing an
antitrust case against Amazon for hurting competitors.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman)
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