Antitrust Law and Big Tech: Present and Future

preview_player
Показать описание
The Biden administration, via the president’s Executive Order on competition and by its appointees to key economic policy and antitrust enforcement posts, has made clear its intent to usher in a new era of progressive-led antitrust reform. To achieve this vision, various changes to the legal framework of antitrust enforcement are in progress or have been proposed—from rescinding and rewriting merger guidelines to promulgating new Federal Trade Commission regulations to having Congress revise the antitrust laws itself.

Much of this effort has been framed in terms of the rise of Big Tech and the colossal size and wealth of America’s most successful internet and computer companies. Are antitrust laws—as currently enforced—too lax in policing anticompetitive behavior in the digital economy? What changes in enforcement or law, if any, are necessary to deal with novel competition concerns posed by the size and reach of these companies?

This panel gives the audience a unique chance to learn from the perspectives of top legal minds on both sides of the question in their own words.

Featuring:

[Moderator] Sarah Oh, Senior Fellow, Technology Policy Institute
George Slover, Senior Counsel for Competition Policy, Center for Democracy and Technology
Alden Abbott, Senior Research Fellow, Mercatus Center
Daniel Hanley, Senior Legal Analyst, Open Markets Institute
Christopher Yoo, Professor, University of Pennsylvania Law School

R Street Institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, public policy research organization. Our mission is to engage in policy research and outreach to promote free markets and limited, effective government.

We believe free markets work better than the alternatives. We also recognize that the legislative process calls for practical responses to current problems. To that end, our motto is “Free markets. Real solutions.”

We offer research and analysis that advance the goals of a more market-oriented society and an effective, efficient government, with the full realization that progress on the ground tends to be made one inch at a time. In other words, we look for free-market victories on the margin.

Рекомендации по теме