Thursday, September 14, 2017

FTC Acting Chairman: Current Antitrust Framework Is Sufficient for Technology Sector

In a September 12, 2017 speech at the Global Antitrust Enforcement Symposium at Georgetown University, Acting Chairman Maureen Ohlhausen of the Federal Trade Commission addressed the proper role of antitrust enforcement in an increasingly digital world.

Acting Chairman Ohlhausen noted the problems with increasing reliance on regulators to control the development of competition in digital markets:

If you want to put your faith in the hands of the regulators, think about some of the subsidiary questions you are actually asking the government to decide. Can these technology firms branch out into new markets, or must they narrowly focus on their original, core competency? When a technology company lowers prices, should that be permitted by regulators because it helps consumers or prohibited because it makes some other business less likely to succeed? How should a regulator weigh these effects against each other?

She concluded:

Although the analysis in the technology sector may be different from other industries, I believe the current framework is sufficiently flexible to address these important issues, but we should continue to refine our understanding on future competitive conditions.