Officials from two federal agencies told Reuters about the
meeting and that their departments planned to attend. The White
House did not confirm the meeting would take place but said
President Joe Biden would meet on Monday "with members of his
administration on efforts to lower prices for working families."
Biden signed in July a sweeping executive order to promote more
competition in the U.S. economy, asking agencies to crack down
on anti-competitive practices in sectors from agriculture to
drugs and labor. That order created the council, which held its
first meeting in September.
The order in July instructed antitrust agencies to focus on
labor, healthcare, technology and agriculture. The White House
has said the "lack of competition drives up prices for consumers
and drives down wages for workers."
The council is chaired by the head of the White House National
Economic Council and includes a number of cabinet agencies
including the Justice, Transportation, Commerce and Agriculture
departments as well as the chairs of the Federal Trade
Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission and Federal
Communications Commission.
The Biden administration has taken steps to promote competition
in many sectors, including the U.S. meat industry.
The Justice Department in September sought to unwind an alliance
between American Airlines and JetBlue Airways Corp.
And last week, U.S. antitrust enforcers announced plans to
rewrite merger guidelines in order to better fight illegal
deals.
The Justice Department and FTC said U.S. industries had become
increasingly concentrated and a surge in merger filings in 2020
and 2021 signaled the situation will worsen.
The second council meeting would also come as Congress
scrutinizes technology companies. Last week, a Senate committee
approved a bill that would bar tech giants like Amazon.com from
giving preference to their own businesses on their websites.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman)
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