Pivot - Monopoly Isn't A Game (with Lina Khan) - Stay Tuned with Preet
Episode Date: May 27, 2025Why should any of us care about monopolies? Lina Khan, the youngest-ever chair of the Federal Trade Commission, joins Preet to discuss the real-world impact of monopoly power, the surprising bipartisa...n support for antitrust enforcement, and her rapid rise to prominence after publishing a groundbreaking paper on Amazon's business practices during law school. Plus, Preet answers questions about the qualifications to become Surgeon General, Kid Rock's restaurant, and Bruce Springsteen. Join the Insider community to stay informed without the hysteria, fear-mongering, or rage-baiting. Sign up on our website, or find us on Substack. Thank you for supporting our work. Show notes and a transcript of the episode are available on our website. You can now watch this episode! Head to the Stay Tuned Youtube channel and subscribe. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. It's Kara Swisher. Pivot is off for the holidays, so we're bringing you an episode of Stay Tuned featuring Preet Bharara's conversation with former FTC Commissioner Lena Kahn.
The two discuss all things antitrust, including whether the Trump administration will continue Kahn's policies or abandon them.
Preet also just launched a new Stay Tuned substack. Sign up at staytuned.substacked.com.
Scott and I will be back on Friday
with the latest breakdown of all things tech and business.
And yes, probably a penis joke or two.
Or three.
From CAFE and the Vox Media Podcast Network,
welcome to Stay Tuned.
I'm Preet Bharara.
One of the biggest ways that we've seen anti-monopoly make such advances is because the evidence
has been on our side.
We had a shortage of infant formula in this country in the year 2022 from a single contamination
in a single factory.
That's Lena Kahn. She made history in 2021 when President Biden appointed her as the youngest ever chair of
the Federal Trade Commission at age 32.
During her time at the FTC, Kahn accused big companies of using their power to push out
competitors and hurt small businesses.
Today, Lena Kahn joins me to discuss the influential paper she wrote
in law school that launched her into the spotlight and paved her path to the FTC. We'll also
explore the nature of fair competition, what she says defines a monopoly, and some of Kahn's
key cases. Later in the show, I'll answer your questions about the proper qualifications
for Surgeon General, Kid Rock's restaurant, and Bruce Springsteen.
That's coming up.
Stay tuned.
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Hey there, this is Peter Kafka. I'm the host of Channels, the show about what
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And this week we're talking to Adam Mosseri who runs Instagram and who also
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I called it Textagram as a joke, which unfortunately stuck as a name for months before I managed
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That's This Week on Channels, wherever you listen to your favorite podcast.
How does monopoly power shape innovation and competition? Former FTC Chair, Lena Kahn,
joins me to discuss.
Lena Kahn, welcome to the show.
It's really an honor to have you.
Thanks so much for having me.
So this seems an odd thing to ask given your relative youth.
How's retirement?
It's been pretty low key.
It's been quiet.
It's been, you know, obviously I wish we'd had more time in government, but it's been
nice.
I have a two-year-old, so it's been pleasant to just get to be around more.
It's not relaxing.
Are you teaching antitrust law to your two-year-old?
I'll be teaching antitrust law in the fall to law students.
And my son has picked up on a lot of ambient meeting
noise and that sort of thing.
Does he think there's an unlawful tying arrangement
in the house?
I think he is working on physical tying right now.
Yes.
But I'm sure we'll get there., I've exhausted all my knowledge of buzzwords
and antitrust law.
So he'll ask you to explain some things.
So I want to get into your biography,
how you got to where you got relatively quickly in life
and talk about your views on antitrust enforcement
for a lay audience.
But let me start with this.
And I'm sure this is how some people come at you.
You were obviously a very high profile chair of the FTC,
and in any government role,
I had a government role for a long time,
there are detractors and there are supporters.
And often in our current sort of tribal environment,
you can guess in advance who the supporter will be
and who the detractor will be.
They line up sort of tribally.
But if I said, what do the following people have in common?
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
Elizabeth Warren, the Senator from Massachusetts,
JD Vance and Matt Gaetz.
What would they all have in common
that would cause me to ask
you that question, Lina?
Well, they all professed to support for the work we were doing at the FTC and have shared
real skepticism about extreme concentrations of economic power and monopoly power.
So that is a through line that we've seen across people who otherwise have very different
politics.
Right.
And just to put a point on it, because you're
modest in your answer, supportive of your work
and particularly supportive of you,
which is an unusual thing to see from that spectrum of folks.
Do you think that antitrust enforcement naturally
falls along ideological lines, or the fact
that you have this strange set of bedfellows
indicate that that's not the case or shouldn't be the case?
Historically, we've seen pretty significant bipartisan support for antitrust, and that's
gone in multiple directions.
Senator Sherman, who was one of the authors of the Sherman Act, was Republican.
We saw, especially in the early decades of federal enforcement,
strong support from both sides to take on the trusts,
take on the robber barons.
And as we then, in the 80s, saw a reversion
from aggressive antitrust, there eventually
was another bipartisan consensus,
a bipartisan consensus around the view
that we should be enforcing the law
with a very different set of goals and values.
And so we have seen a significant bipartisan consensus
on different sides of how you should be doing antitrust.
So, and where do you think we are today at this moment?
It's an interesting question because it's too early
to know what the full policy
of the Trump administration is gonna be on antitrust.
One question for me when I was there was how long will we have? Because the last time we had seen
such a sharp pivot in antitrust was during the Reagan years, where we saw radical reorientation
of how they approached antitrust laws. And they had eight years of Reagan plus four years of Bush
to really create institutional durability
for the project that they were pursuing.
I had three and a half years.
And so there was a real question
around the institutional durability
of what we were gonna be able to achieve.
But strikingly, we have seen less of a retreat
from this administration on antitrust than
we have in almost any other policy arena.
They made a series of decisions to keep the merger guidelines, keep several of our major
antitrust lawsuits going.
So far, we haven't really seen any major break at all. Who knows if that will stay in place for the full administration or whether we'll see pretty
overt weaponization of the antitrust laws, so they're rewarding friends and punishing
enemies.
But so far, we have seen more continuity than I think anybody expected.
Does aggressive antitrust enforcement fall comfortably within a populist ideology in
government?
Well, if you step back, the antitrust laws were founded on the view that extreme concentrations
of economic power pose a threat to people's freedoms and liberties, much in the same way
that we understand extreme concentrations of political power or state power to pose.
There was a recognition that if what we really want is to create freedom
for people in their day-to-day lives, you can't just have checks and balances
and your sphere and governance and then allow monopolies or autocrats of trade,
as they were called to govern.
And you know, there was a recognition that here Americans had overthrown a monarch and
they weren't going to instead sign up to be ruled by monopolists.
And so there has been a real original understanding of how antitrust, but more broadly, an anti-monopoly
ethos is absolutely critical for some of our most cherished values.
Did you play Monopoly as a kid?
I did.
And did you like the game?
It was fine.
It's been interesting to learn.
It was fine.
The anti-monopolist says it was fine.
It was fine.
I mean, as a board game, it was fine.
Do you think it's like gaming propaganda?
Do you think we should eliminate,
obviously you're not a censor, but I but it's a semi-serious question.
Do we teach the wrong things about money and concentrations of power in this country?
Well, antitrust and anti-monopoly as a philosophy fits comfortably within a capitalist system
that we have, right?
And so much of the productivity and the innovations and America's competitive
advantage have been the results of the fact that you have an economy where people are
able to pursue a good idea, bring it to market, and then enjoy great success, right? If you're
undertaking the risk of bringing a product to market, you should be able to reap the reward. And so that type of motivation and thinking is absolutely critical.
I do think that, and it's especially true for my generation and generations since, there
has been a real disillusionment and a real question about who our economy is really working
for.
You know, of course, during the financial crisis, we saw an initial inflection point.
And I think since then, we've seen, you know, episode after episode where for a lot of young
people, what our policy and politics have shown is that our economy is really designed
to work primarily for very wealthy, very well connected people, as those who are trying
to make rent, trying to make sure that they're not going bankrupt for medical bills are having a much harder time. And so I do
think that there is a real skepticism and questioning about who our current
economic order is really serving. You know as a matter of political rhetoric,
when people oppose antitrust enforcement and when you say as an
antitrust enforcer that monopolies are not good, they're not
good for the mass of people for various reasons, and we'll get into that in a moment, the people
on the other side don't say we love monopolies, right?
Nobody goes forth and waves the banner of monopoly happily, right?
Well, some people actually do.
Some people think monopolies are great, that they just good.
Who are those people?
They span thinkers, people kind of lineage of the Chicago school that thought monopolies
oftentimes would actually deliver great benefits to people. And then you have people in the
kind of policy advocacy community, you could call them lobbyists or others who are often
advocating for those views.
So you do have a legitimate pro-monopoly camp.
How large is that camp, though?
How large is that camp?
I mean, it's gotten much smaller over the last decade, I would say, as anti-monopoly
has really made great advances in our politics and as a mode of governing.
And I think one of the biggest ways that we've seen anti-monopoly make such advances
is because the evidence has been on our side.
I mean, I think we have, as a country,
seen evidence after evidence about how
extreme concentrations of economic power actually
lead to major problems for Americans.
I mean, that can range from shortages of things like IV bags or gun powder that arise from extreme concentration of production.
We had a shortage of infant formula in this country in the year 2022 from a single contamination in a single factory.
We've seen problems around planes falling apart in the sky, right? Some of the
challenges that we're seeing in Boeing, you can see trace back to a major merger that
they did in the late 1990s where they were allowed to buy out their major competitor
in the US and that fundamentally changed their incentives. And as a general matter, we've
just seen market after market become more consolidated.
Prices have become higher, wages have fallen.
It's become much harder for new businesses and entrants to actually enter and compete
on a level playing field.
And so I think as that evidence has become much more difficult to ignore and contest,
we have seen the pro-monopoly advocacy community grow smaller, but they're still out there.
Can we define a term which is difficult in antitrust law?
What is a monopoly?
How do you define a monopoly?
And how should laypeople understand what a monopoly is?
So there are different ways to define what a monopoly is and in court, you know, there
are different methods and mechanisms that enforcers use.
Some are primarily trying to define what is the relevant market, who is in and who is
out of this market, and then how do you calculate effectively the percentage that this one company
has and is it enough to trigger monopoly status, which itself can range from 60% to, say, 90% and courts have come out
different ways on what the right cutoff point is.
To my mind, one of the most effective ways to be able to show a monopoly is through its
behavior, what we call direct evidence of monopoly power.
And in short, a firm can behave like a monopoly when it's able to make its products worse
or raise its prices for its customers without facing real consequences in the marketplace.
And so you can understand this in some ways as a firm becoming too big to care that they
have amassed not just a size but have also cut out competitors such
they can get away with making products more expensive or making products or services worse
for their customers without the ordinary checks that you would expect in a competitive marketplace.
And so those are both just two ways of being able to show monopoly power, even market power.
And as when we were bringing our cases, we would routinely deploy both methods.
And what's an example of an entity about which there would be consensus that they have monopoly
power?
Well, there are major cases underway.
We just saw a verdict from a judge in DC a few months ago ruling that Google had monopolized
the market for generalized online search. The Justice Department in that instance used both
indirect and direct forms of evidence to make that showing. And so Google has now been found
to be a monopoly in online search. I want to talk about Amazon because Amazon looms large in your origin story as well.
So in 2017, you wrote what people call an article in the Yale Law Journal that had quite
a response. Amazon's antitrust paradox. for people who are not from or of law school, I will note
for them that even though in the popular press, your piece is called an article, it is in
fact among law students and lawyers called a note.
Because you were just a law student at the time, and obviously not just a law student,
but thinking about these big issues.
But I'll note for the record that when you're a law student
and you write something that's important or not,
it's called a note.
When you're a law professor, it's called an article.
Just wanna put that little piece of business beside us.
As I understand it, the thesis of the article, the note,
was in part that ordinarily, when we're thinking about
what is good or bad with respect to monopoly power,
as you were saying a few minutes ago, one of the things you look at is consumer welfare, right?
And whether or not consumers are being helped or undermined in various ways, including with respect to price.
So if one measure of monopoly power, as you were describing a few minutes ago, is the ability to,
with impunity, increase prices such that people are at the mercy of those price increases,
that indicates monopoly power. And one of the things you say is, well, in the modern world,
especially as epitomized by Amazon, prices are low, and they have the ability to keep prices low. And so this focus on consumer welfare
defined in part as a focus on price doesn't actually uncover the monopolistic power of a
big company like Amazon, which has other features that it can take advantage of and actions that
it can engage in, including predatory pricing. And you mentioned, I will say, in various places, a
company near and dear to my own heart, my brother and
his best friend from high school started diapers.com,
which was the subject of a lot of discussion and
angst in my family and also in the public at large,
because Amazon was engaging in a certain price
tactic with respect to diapers.com.
Anyway, that's a very long-winded, probably imperfect summary of your article.
How did you come to think about it that way, and why was that such a revelation?
So one of my jobs after college was as a researcher and reporter where I was basically doing deep
dives into various markets across the US economy.
And so I would do deep research into chicken farming, the aluminum market, rental cars,
book publishing, and really document the ways that market after market had become so much
more consolidated and how there were real gaps between how antitrust enforcers were
thinking about market power
and consolidation and what was really happening on the ground for everyday people.
One of the last areas that I started looking into before I went to law school was online
commerce.
And I spent several months talking to two sets of market participants about how they
viewed Amazon in particular.
One was the set of businesses that were selling through Amazon.
And the other was investors and financial analysts and
people who were viewing Amazon through a more long term proposition.
And it became clear just through those conversations that Amazon was
amassing structural power in the marketplace that was not being cognized through the
Antitrust prism that enforcers were using at that time where there was you know a very charitable view of Amazon where you know
People thought well its prices are generally low and so therefore it must be good for competition
Not fully tracking the business practices that Amazon was using to establish real structural
dominance in the marketplace, both predation, predatory pricing, as you were noting, as
well as vertical integration in various parts of the market that allowed them to then exploit
certain conflicts of interest and certain information asymmetries.
But I really wrote the article and really focused on Amazon more as a way to tell a
broader story about the evolution and antitrust and this major reorientation and pivot that
happened in the late 70s and early 80s that I believed had departed from what Congress
intended when it wrote these laws, departed from what the laws actually said, and now was also creating major blind spots
between how enforcers and potentially even courts
were understanding what monopoly power looked like
and how it was actually being exercised,
and that that blind spot was especially acute
in digital markets,
where you just have a different set of economic dynamics.
And so that's really what the article was looking to set out.
So what's interesting to me is, you know, Amazon began as nothing, right?
It was an idea in a guy's head of relatively recent vintage.
I don't know the exact year in which it started.
And it very quickly got to the point that you're describing.
And as you wrote in, I guess, a parallel New York Times piece
in 2017, talking about Amazon, quote,
in building this vast empire, Amazon
chased growth over paying dividends,
pricing key goods and services below cost
to chase out competitors.
It invested heavily to buy out innovators like diapers.com,
my brother's company.
After waging price wars,
Amazon followed its acquisition by raising prices."
At the time, is there some argument that if you had the foresight to chase growth at the
expense of paying dividends and if the capital market's like that and want to invest in your
company?
Because not everyone thought it was going to be a winning bet.
You know, I am old enough to remember lots and lots of people thought this was a losing
proposition ultimately, and that Amazon was overpriced and Amazon would fail because all
it was doing was losing money and not making a profit as it, you know, added products and
services and goods to its lineup,
is there some argument that they didn't cheat
and steal to do that?
And they deserve a place of dominance
by chasing growth over paying dividends?
And that was a smart, innovative way
to think about building a company?
Or is that totally absurd?
Well, chasing growth over profits is not illegal.
Companies do it all the time, especially in digital markets, given the real premium of
establishing scale, establishing the network effects, establishing the entry barriers that
really pay off.
It was specific practices that Amazon engaged in that ultimately the FTC and a whole bunch
of state AGs determined were illegal.
I think the predatory campaign that we saw from Amazon against a whole set of companies,
including diapers.com, clearly could have been in that bucket.
The Supreme Court jurisprudence has come to take a much more skeptical view of what counts
as predation.
They view predation itself as irrational and unlikely to ever exist.
So practically, it's become very difficult to bring a predatory pricing case. And they view predation itself as irrational and unlikely to ever exist.
So practically, it's become very difficult to bring a predatory pricing case.
But the lawsuit that the FTC ended up filing in 2023 laid out a whole set of business tactics
where Amazon had not just become big, but they had actively blocked out competitors,
which has now allowed them to actually make
things worse for their customers, both the businesses that sell through Amazon as well
the consumers.
The complaint details some of these practices.
For example, Amazon had a policy that basically punished any business for listing a lower
price on a website other than Amazon.
And it was doing this at the same time that it was dramatically hiking the fees that a business had
to pay to sell through Amazon. So say you're selling coffee mugs and selling them for $10.
And on Amazon's website, you have to pay Amazon $5 for every $10 you make.
There's a rival website where you only have to pay that company $2 for every $10 you make.
And you want to list your mugs for a lower price on that other website because it's cheaper
to sell there.
If you did that, Amazon could make you disappear from its webpage or it could punish you in
all sorts of ways.
And that really matters for businesses because they rely on Amazon for so much volume, for
so many sales.
And it was these types of practices that basically blocked out rivals, kept rivals from ever
being able to achieve the same scale and momentum to really become a meaningful competitor to
Amazon.
Amazon does now take up to one out of every $2
from businesses who sell through it.
We also uncovered a whole set of pricing practices
that have been inflating how much customers pay.
It was very deliberately littering its search page
with irrelevant ads, and we uncovered documents
from top executives saying basically
Yes, you could make search results worse for consumers because basically we know they don't have anywhere else to go
So, you know the complaint details a whole set of specific
practices that are different from just taking a long-term view or or chasing growth over profits
But specific anti-competitive acts that we believe ultimately violated the law
and have made Americans worse off.
How do you square that with the fact, if you go back to the classic way of looking at consumer
harm and consumer conditions, that I, like many other people, when I have my druthers,
I order from Amazon.
So you're talking about particular ways in which the government has alleged they've engaged
in anti-competitive practices.
But if you're a bread and butter consumer, just buying random stuff for your house or
for your office, and you have low prices and you have immediate delivery and good customer
satisfaction, and the company has not taken advantage of those things that you're describing
with respect to the bread and butter consumer of stuff, does that not matter? Is that not a point
in their favor or is part of the issue? Well, at any moment, they can do something deleterious,
even in that landscape. I'm not sure how to think about how that thing, which is a net good,
in that landscape? I'm not sure how to think about how that thing, which is in that good,
which you argued is maybe too much the focus, but it still should be some focus or not the focus or
of even focus? How do you think about that? So I'll answer this in two ways. One is,
you know, I think especially in digital markets, there's actually a life cycle
of being a monopolist and exploiting your monopoly power. Phase one is when you are achieving and chasing scale.
The goal at that moment is really to bring on as many sellers and as many buyers onto
your marketplace as you can.
In that mode, your incentives are to oftentimes make your service really great for both the sellers and the buyers.
And, you know, even if that's done in the goal of achieving dominance that you may later exploit,
mode two is once you've achieved that structural power and coupled that with tactics that are blocking competitors from the market,
then you can make things worse. And you can make things worse, yes, through higher prices, but also through coercion and
bullying.
And a lot of the businesses and the market participants that the FTC heard from did allege
all sorts of bullying tactics, candidly, as well as customer service for them getting
worse.
Antitrust is not about identifying some absolute price levels that we think are good or bad.
It's really about competition.
The assumption is that competition in markets is really what's going to drive firms to make
products better for people and really innovate.
And that's been a key driver of America's growth and our innovation
as a country.
And what Amazon did when it blocked out those competitors was interfered with that free
enterprise system and with that competitive process.
The lawsuit actually does allege that people are paying more because of this, and products
could be even cheaper.
You could have more innovative, say, interfaces.
You could have search results that are not cluttered
with irrelevant ads.
And so this is more about the alternatives
that were foregone and lost because
of Amazon's anti-competitive tactics.
And it can be difficult concretely
to point to those counterfactuals.
And Amazon's case is interesting. and the lawsuit actually points to other rivals
that were on the cusp of taking off, that could have taken off, but for Amazon's tactics.
So it's really about what could have been and how things could have been even better for Americans with more competition. I'll be right back with Lina Khan after this.
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When comedian Chris Gethard was growing up, he went to a place called Action Park.
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Some people called him a berserk Willy Wonka.
Anyone who went to Action Park understood you could get really messed up going there.
Not only did we know that, it was a huge part of the appeal.
I'm Phoebe Judge. Listen to our latest episode,
Action Park on Criminal, wherever you get your podcasts. I think one of your criticisms of monopoly power is that ultimately innovation gets stifled
there because you have monopoly power and you don't have to innovate because you have
a huge set of customers or clients or buyers or whatever the market would call you.
And I think you have given examples of cases, maybe you can give some examples for us here,
where you talk about AI, for example.
You can have somebody or a company in a place of complete dominance, but then some other
innovative technology is overlooked or bypassed or given short shrift,
and then this other thing happens.
What's confusing about that is some people might take that as an admission that monopolies
don't last forever even without involvement and interference from the government.
Even the most dominant figure is ultimately, the pejorative you can apply to that is they're
ultimately not going to innovate and someone else will.
And that will naturally reduce the non-innovators' market power and become less monopolistic.
Is that fair or not?
Well the innovator is going to need to know that if they produce something that is better, they actually have a chance of
reaping the rewards of that innovation.
And that's what can get distorted when you have a monopolist that's running a muck, that
these monopolists often have all sorts of levers that they can deploy to cut out that
innovator from the market.
And that's what antitrust is about policing.
And if you don't have antitrust enforcers policing that,
then that innovator may have that idea,
but may not think it's worth it.
Why take on the big investment?
Why take on the risk if ultimately you're just
going to get locked out of the market?
And at the FTC, I would frequently talk to startups,
talk to founders, and we
would hear this, them grappling with this time after time.
You know, we would hear from, say, founders that were creating various types of apps that
were needing to get access to the app store on, say, you know, Apple or Google's devices.
They would have to navigate all sorts of bureaucracy.
Sometimes there would be a conflict of interest if, say, one of these companies had their
own app that they wanted to favor, and that would just create all sorts of problems for
these innovators that were trying to get access to market.
Similarly, this is something that we see in merger enforcement.
So one of the mergers that the FTC blocked was Sanofi's attempted acquisition of Maze.
Sanofi is a major player in the pharmaceutical market and they had been given an FDA-granted
monopoly on treatments for Pompe disease. This is a really awful disease where basically your
muscles degenerate, it exhibits in young kids and you need pretty expensive medicines. Maze was coming into the market and they had an alternative treatment for
this same disease.
And whereas Sanofi's treatment required basically going and
getting hooked up to an IV bi-weekly,
Maze's treatment could have been taken orally ultimately and
could have really been a game changer.
And this was really good, healthy competition, right?
This is the kind of competition, the kind of innovation that we
expect to see in our markets.
And Sanofi was trying to buy out Maze.
And we thought that that was anti-competitive, that that clearly
violated the antitrust laws because here you had the existing monopolist
that had not innovated this treatment and they were trying to buy out the company that had, and it would not really have the same incentive, right?
Because it would risk cannibalizing its own sales, maybe it would slow down this alternative
treatment or bring it out in a way that was much more favorable to it but not its patients.
And so that type of active policing of anticompetitive conduct, but also anticompetitive mergers,
is absolutely critical to make sure that the people who have an incentive to innovate actually
have access to markets.
And then ultimately it's the public that gets to benefit from that innovation.
Yeah.
I guess all I'm saying is maybe this is a silly point and maybe it's not a good point,
that monopolists are not immortal, even in the absence of enforcement.
Is that fair? Are there natural reasons in the life cycle of a company that becomes a monopolist,
not enforcement-based, but natural, ultimately over time, competitive reasons why a monopolist
falls off their pedestal? And if that's so, I mean, I don't know, maybe that's an argument that the Chicago folks make,
that ultimately the market in certain circumstances, not every circumstance,
is able to right itself. Because otherwise, you would predict that a monop- once you achieve
monopoly power, you persist in that monopoly power position in eternity, but that doesn't
happen.
Why doesn't that happen?
Well, this is exactly the argument that the Chicago people made.
They basically said that, look, monopolies are unlikely to ever be able to fully exercise
monopoly power because there's so much competition in markets.
But say even if they do, once they start exploiting that monopoly power, they are ultimately
going to be disciplined in the market because you are going to see these new entrants that
come in, you're going to see new innovations that displace them.
There's just been reams of evidence over the last few decades that have shown that that's
not actually how markets work in reality, that oftentimes there are actually meaningful
barriers to entry in those markets,
some of which are controlled by the existing monopolist. I think the other thing is,
even if, say, after 20 years of incumbency, a monopolist could ultimately lose its throne
because there is some innovator in the market, that could have happened much sooner if the
monopolist's illegal tactics were checked.
As enforcers, we have an obligation to ensure that the public is not being denied those
benefits of a free enterprise system of competitive markets while we sit on the sidelines and
just see, hey, maybe it'll be a few decades and this monopolist will naturally meet its
end. Is there such a thing as a perfectly lawfully operating and lawfully achievable monopoly
status?
We're talking a lot, obviously, given the job that you had about companies engaging
in monopolistic behavior and predatory pricing and all of that.
And maybe there's not an example of this because naturally people engage in conduct that can
be characterized that way.
But are there or have there been examples of companies that just got to that status
just by doing things well and better than everybody else and innovating better than
everybody else and not running afoul either legally or in principle of anti-monopolistic thinking?
Well, you do see companies that enjoy monopoly status
because, for example, they've been given a license
from the government.
So you see this in the pharma space routinely.
You see this in areas like utilities
where firms are given certain privileges
or certain exemptions or certain licenses to operate.
And you see kind of a very active market-making role by the government in that instance.
Those are monopolies that are clearly sanctioned, and oftentimes that comes with other obligations
or other prohibitions on their behavior that's supposed to act as the check that competition
will not be serving in that instance.
Yeah.
I'm just, look, this is not my main expertise as a lawyer.
But I just wonder if the theory is that a company can't really attain and persist in
being a monopoly absent some conferral of a benefit or a license by the government or
absent some nefarious conduct because the market will always topple
that kind of monopolist.
Yeah, and maybe that's an interesting question
or thought experiment.
I mean, as an enforcer, that's not something
you need to have a view on, because the law doesn't,
you know, say being a monopoly itself is illegal.
It's only when it's attached with certain types
of monopolistic behaviors that the law kicks in.
So obviously, your tenure was not without controversy.
And I mentioned a set of strange bedfellows
that was not only supportive of your work,
but supportive of you.
And as always happens, I used to be
an enforcer of a different type.
The one kind of work that we didn't
do in the Southern District of New York
and that we deferred to the main justice on, the only area we deferred to main justice on even in
our own district was antitrust enforcement.
I proceeded my time there.
Is there a particular criticism or category of criticism that you took more seriously
than others, even if you disagreed with it? Well, I think one chart that would sometimes get levied at the FTC was that the FTC was
somehow categorically antagonistic to corporate America or somehow it was anti-business, which
was really surprising to me because oftentimes some of the biggest supporters of the FTC's
anti-trust work was the business
community.
And I think sometimes in DC there can be this tendency to view business as a monolith, not
recognizing that, say, you know, the Fortune 100 or even the Fortune 500 are not representative
of the full panoply of businesses in America.
And so we would hear a lot of concerns from say,
independent grocers or independent pharmacists
or startups and founders,
really people who make up the majority of businesses
in America about how they too often felt like
they were not facing a level playing field,
that they were really struggling to compete
because of the potentially predatory or coercive
of abusive tactics of some of the existing incumbents.
And so that was a disconnect that I worried sometimes was not appreciated, especially
in kind of some of how the FTC was discussed or portrayed, that that strong support among
businesses both for our antitrust work but also candidly for our consumer protection
work.
One example here is the FTC's work taking on Made in USA fraud. Made in USA fraud had been rampant. This was an area where the FTC had been keeping some of its powder dry, really not using the full
set of tools that it had to disincentivize companies from lying about their products being made in America.
And this really hurt consumers who
were being deceived about whether their products were
being made.
But it also really hurt honest businesses.
If you're a business that wants to produce in America,
you're investing in a factory here,
you're taking on the additional cost of doing that.
If you're then ultimately just going to lose business
to a company that's shipping stuff from China or somewhere else and then just slapping a made in USA label, that's
unfair.
And so that was just one example of how the FTC's work was really about creating a level
playing field and worries that benefited consumers and workers, but also honest businesses.
Do you have a view of the president's firing of the two democratically appointed commissioners
and the legality of that and how that'll play out?
Well, the president's firing of commissioner Bedoyan and commissioner Slaughter is directly
and clearly in contravention of prevailing Supreme Court precedent.
In Humphrey's executor, you had FDR fire an FTC commissioner
and ultimately that FTC commissioner sued and said,
hey, look, the FTC act says we can only be fired
for malfeasance, inefficiency, neglect of duty.
None of those things is being charged here.
And ultimately the Supreme Court held
that those removal protections in the FTC act
were lawful, were legal.
Since then, the Supreme Court has had several opportunities to revisit
Humphrey's executor, including cases implicating the CFPB and their removal
protections of the CFPB director, which ultimately were changed. And the court
has, you know, stuck by Humphrey's executor, no matter what kind of
dicta they may have been in various types of footnotes. So the court has stuck by Humphrey's executor, no matter what kind of dicta they
may have been in various types of footnotes. So the law of the land is Humphrey's executor,
and the administration's decision to fire these two commissioners is clearly at odds
with that. I know they have filed suit, they are contesting their firing. There are also
some parallel cases involving the firing of NLRB commissioners.
So we're going to have to see how this shakes out, but there's no debate around the fact
that Humphrey's executor of the law of the land says one thing and the administration
has done another.
But do you believe that will remain the law of the land?
I don't know.
I mean, clearly this is the Supreme Court.
Roe v. Wade was the law of the land for a while too.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, the Supreme Court is very comfortable revisiting precedent and throwing out the
window even a 90-year-old precedent in this sort of way.
So I don't know.
I don't know what's going to happen.
I do think there are strong arguments for why these removal protections are not only
good but lawful, but we'll have to see what happens.
What do you think of the new chair?
And how do you think that this reconstituted, partly
constituted FTC will handle issues
and what their priorities will be for the next 3 and 1
half years?
You know, the current FTC, as well as the antitrust division,
has continued with several of the initiatives
that we had pursued on the antitrust front.
We had promulgated new merger guidelines, for example, that laid out a more rigorous
approach to viewing whether a merger would violate the Clayton Act.
They had kept those on the books despite a lot of speculation from the deal-making community
that those would be rescinded right away.
We have major lawsuits against not just Amazon,
but also Facebook.
There is a current trial underway.
There was a lot of speculation, as well as reporting,
that Mark Zuckerberg was trying to convince
the administration to pull the suit, to settle the suit
on the eve of trial.
They did not do that.
They are still litigating that case.
So again, we are seeing a whole bunch of continuity.
I do worry about the consumer protection side.
That is where we have seen some real retrenchment.
And I do worry that we're going to see people suffer
all sorts of unfair, deceptive practices
if this FTC becomes much less vigilant.
For example, they just decided to delay a rule that was set to go into effect
last week.
This is a rule that would require that companies make it as easy to cancel a
subscription as it is to sign up for one, taking issue with a lot of these unfair
and deceptive subscription traps that are proliferated.
We had finalized this rule last October.
The rule was set to go into effect last week, and then they just announced on the eve of
it that they were going to delay it by another two months.
I don't know what's going on there, and we'll have to kind of monitor closely to make sure
we don't see further retrenchment there too.
What's next for you?
Well, you know, I'm figuring out what is the next phase
of a lot of this work and movement.
You know, the speed with which a lot of this work
went from kind of reformist ideas on the outside
to being given the opportunity to govern
was breathtakingly fast.
So there is actually still a lot of work
and infrastructure to be built.
One thing that I'm really excited about is just the enormous amount of energy and enthusiasm
among young people for this work.
I get dozens of emails weekly about, you know, even from high schoolers who say, you know,
they want to be a trust buster and are studying Ida Tarbell, let alone from college students
and law students who really want to enter the arena and make
sure we're using the laws to take on illegal monopolies and check unfair methods of competition.
And so I'm going to be figuring out how do we make sure we can fully harness and direct
that energy so that if there is another opportunity, we have a real standing army to kind of be
ready to come in and help with that.
You used the word arena. Was that a deliberate call back to Teddy Roosevelt?
Not deliberately, but the main reason.
Oh my gosh, this is on your brain. Teddy Roosevelt is on your brain.
I've been very generous with your time, Lena Kahn. It's been a real pleasure to speak with you. Thanks so much.
Thanks for having me.
It's been a real pleasure to speak with you. Thanks so much.
Thanks for having me.
My conversation with Lena Kahn continues for members of the Cafe Insider community.
In the bonus for insiders, we discuss how companies grow into monopolies.
In order to be able to exploit your monopoly power in mode two, you need to figure out
how to keep out competitors. To try out the membership head to cafe.com slash insider. Again, that's cafe.com slash insider.
Stay tuned. After the break, I'll answer your questions about the proper qualifications to
become Surgeon General, Kid Rocks Restaurant, and Bruce Springsteen. Now let's get to your questions.
This question comes in a tweet from Lilian who asks,
How can someone be nominated to be surgeon general with no medical license? And the record will reflect that the question has three
question marks. Thanks for the question Lillian. You're referring of course to
the controversial appointment of Dr. Casey Means to be surgeon general. After
Means' appointment was announced, the internet, as it is wont to do, exploded
with articles dissecting whether she is eligible for the role.
So it's a good question, but first let's take a look at what the Surgeon General actually does.
Most of us know the Surgeon General from health warnings on products like cigarettes,
but the position encompasses far more than that, though not surgery.
The Surgeon General technically serves as the operational leader
of what's called the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, one of America's eight uniformed services.
Its primary mission is to protect, promote, and advance public health and safety across
the country.
Their responsibilities include things like providing health care to medically underserved
communities, preventing and controlling diseases, and ensuring the safety and effectiveness of drugs
and medical devices, just to name a few.
In prior episodes of Stay Tuned, if you've listened,
you know that we've discussed appointed positions
like the attorney general and Supreme Court justice.
Under the laws that authorize those appointments,
there are no specific professional qualifications required,
which may seem odd, but the Surgeon General is different.
There the law actually outlines the qualifications an appointee must meet.
The law states, quote, the Surgeon General shall be appointed from individuals who, one,
are members of the regular corps, and two, have specialized training or significant experience
in public health programs, end quote.
So to go to your actual question, does Dr. Casey Means meet those qualifications?
Well, let's see.
Dr. Means arguably has an unconventional medical background.
According to NPR, she earned her medical degree from Stanford University,
but left her surgical residency part way through,
citing, among other things, her disillusionment with mainstream medicine.
She went on to open a functional medicine practice, a form of alternative medicine,
and later co-founded a company called Levels, which focuses on continuous glucose monitoring.
So although she didn't complete her residency, she did complete enough postgraduate training
to qualify for a medical license in the state of Oregon.
However, according to public records, that license is at this moment, while her nomination
is pending, inactive.
So does Dr. Means meet the first legal requirement, being a member of the regular corps, the formal
name for the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, which the Surgeon General is supposed
to oversee.
Now in the past, some Surgeon General appointees were not already members of the corps, but
they used a workaround.
They were first appointed to the corps just before being named Surgeon General appointees were not already members of the Corps, but they used a workaround.
They were first appointed to the Corps just before being named Surgeon General.
But that loophole may not work in Dr. Means' case.
To be appointed to the regular Corps and to even utilize the loophole,
you need a valid medical license.
And Dr. Means' license in Oregon, as I mentioned,
is currently inactive and needs to be renewed,
which can sometimes take a while.
And does she meet the second requirement, requiring specialized training or significant
experience in public health programs?
Well, she does have a medical degree and she does have experience running a functional
medicine practice.
But is that enough?
Well, I'm a lawyer, not a physician, but some physicians, including former Surgeons General,
have said it's not enough. So based on the law and past precedent, unless Dr. Means can demonstrate
sufficient public health experience and probably quickly renew her medical license, she probably
doesn't meet the qualifications to serve as Surgeon General. But will the Trump White House
try to push the nomination through anyway?
That remains to be seen.
Stay tuned.
This question comes in an email from Rick, who writes,
Last weekend, Kid Rock temporarily shut down his Nashville steakhouse because many of his
workers are undocumented and didn't show up for work because they were scared of ICE raids.
But why is law enforcement targeting the undocumented workers and not their employers?
Shouldn't they be held accountable?
Isn't it illegal to hire undocumented workers?
That's a great question, Rick.
And I want to state at the outset that Nashville has become one of my favorite cities in the
country.
And I've actually been, briefly,
briefly, to Kid Rock's restaurant.
So in any event, I believe you're referring to a recent report in the Nashville scene
about a wave of temporary restaurant closures across that city due to fears of ice raids.
One of the most notable was Kid Rock's restaurant, which is, of course, called Kid Rock's Big
Ass Honky Tonk Rock and Roll
Steakhouse.
It reportedly shut down last Saturday, typically its busiest night, because many of its workers
who were undocumented stayed home, out of fear of being detained.
Interestingly, the article makes no mention of ICE investigating the owners or management
of the restaurants for hiring undocumented workers in the first place, which is probably what sparked your question.
So Rick, if you take a look across presidential administrations, different presidents have
approached illegal immigration enforcement in different ways.
Some have focused primarily on punishing undocumented immigrants themselves, believing it would
deter others from entering illegally.
Others have emphasized targeting employers, arguing that holding businesses accountable
for hiring undocumented workers would be more effective and also be a deterrent, because
if there are no jobs available, immigrants would lose the main incentive to come here
illegally.
Now, George W. Bush's administration focused primarily on the immigrants, conducting numerous
workplace raids aimed at arresting and deporting undocumented workers.
The Obama administration took a very different approach.
Obama's team moved away from workplace raids,
instead opting for what they called paper raids,
which were audits of employer paperwork
to verify compliance with employment eligibility laws.
Under Obama, the number of physical workplace rates dropped sharply, while paperwork audits
increased significantly.
These audits resulted in consequences for employers.
One paperwork rate led to a $1 million fine against Abercrombie and Fitch for failing
to properly verify their employees' eligibility.
The Biden administration continued in the same vein.
Donald Trump's two administrations, on the other hand, took the George W. Bush's policy
of workplace raids and turned them up to 11.
Trump has focused primarily on immigrant workers rather than employers, often conducting highly
publicized attention-grabbing operations like the ones we've recently seen making headlines,
including in the Nashville
scene.
So Rick, to answer your original question, yes, the law clearly allows for punishing
employers who hire undocumented workers, and that's been done in the past.
However, I doubt that this administration plans to aggressively pursue those penalties,
and I think even less likely, against Kid Rock, given his vocal support of Donald Trump.
By the way, what did Kid Rock have to say about this story?
Kid Rock himself responded by saying, quote, I 100% support getting illegal criminals out
of our country no matter where they are, end quote.
So you know, one might be able to say to Kid Rock, listen, it was your restaurant's management
who chose to hire those quote unquote illegal criminals to work in your kitchen and might have broken the law when it did so.
And you could also ask him, when will you hold those people accountable
since the restaurant has your name on it?
This question comes in a tweet from Hannah who asks,
can you please break down Trump's latest rant
about Bruce Springsteen?
Hashtag askpreet.
Well, Hannah, based on the timing of your tweet,
because there have been a couple of things
that Trump has said about Bruce Springsteen,
but based on the timing of your tweet,
I assume you're referring to Trump's post on Truth Social
where he called Bruce Springsteen things like,
highly overrated, a pushy obnoxious jerk,
and a dried out prune of a rocker.
My response is this, who are you calling a dried out prune you f***ing a**?
Let me say also, compared to Bruce Springsteen, you're a f***ing a**.
And finally, ***BEEP***
Now more seriously than childish name-calling,
after you tweeted this, Hannah,
Donald Trump put out a post
that says he wants to order a major investigation
of Bruce Springsteen
for reasons that don't make much sense.
If you want to hear a substantive conversation about that threat,
that crazy threat
by the President of the United States against the boss, Joyce Vance and I did a live stream for Substack, which
you can find for free on Substack or on our YouTube page. Well, that's it for this episode of Stay Tuned.
Thanks again to my guest, Lena Kahn.
If you like what we do, rate and review the show on Apple podcasts or wherever you listen.
Every positive review helps new listeners find the show on Apple podcasts or wherever you listen. Every positive review helps new listeners find the
show. Send me your questions about news, politics, and justice. Tweet them to me at Preet Bharara with
the hashtag AskPreet. You can also now reach me on Blue Sky or you can call and leave me a message
at 833-997-7338. That's 833-99-Preet. Or you can send an email to lettersatcafe.com.
Stay tuned is presented by CAFE and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
The executive producer is Tamara Sepper.
The technical director is David Tattishore.
The deputy editor is Celine Rohr.
The editorial producers are Noah Azolai and Jake Kaplan. The
associate producer is Claudia Hernandez and the cafe team is Matthew Billy, Nat
Weiner and Leanna Greenway. Our music is by Andrew Dost. I'm your host, Preet
Bharara. As always, stay tuned.