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Quinn Chasan's avatar

Neo-Brandeisians led by Khan et al put forward the narrative that inflation was driven by corporate consolidation and "greedflation..."

They were proven immediately incorrect, e.g. egg prices skyrocketed due to avian flu supply shocks and subsequently crashed when flocks recovered, proving prices fluctuate based on supply, not because corporations suddenly decide to be "less greedy." Did they revise their statements? Of course not

Before them, the 2010s argument was that large corporations were short-termist and quarterly-focused. This idea brought people like Warren to power. Well, now we have the biggest tech companies in the world blowing large-nation-state levels of CapEx on long-term planning with gigantic structural investments in America, and the exact same people still accuse them of acting in bad faith regardless of the industry or the behavior.

Before then, the 90s/00s argument was that large corporations executed huge CapEx in extractive ways that destroyed the environment. This brought people like Nader into power. Now, big tech companies invest exponentially more in green energy and grid retrofitting than the Green New Deal even considered. The same ideological compatriots now pretend data centers are equally extractive by fabricating water use issues. The reality is the opposite. Massive AI infrastructure (like MSFTs new Wisconsin facility) uses the same amount of water annually as a single neighborhood restaurant. They're literally some of the most water and energy efficient businesses on the planet.

As I've written about before and as Noah points out, we deserve far better advocates for real antitrust issues. The 'Consumer Welfare Standard' should absolutely remain the legal baseline. Instead, these "advocates" abandon empirical harm metrics to accuse anyone who disagrees of being part of the oligarchic Epstein class or whatever other schoolyard nonsense they can throw and believe will stick.

NubbyShober's avatar

Isn't Lina Khan the pre-eminent standard bearer of the Antimonopolists?

But the Democratic Party admittedly has a weak bench when it comes to pro-entrepreurial, pro-growth experience and sentiment. Which was why I especially appreciated the attention VP Harris gave--whether just lip service or not--to actively supporting small businesses.

But regarding the ills of excessive market concentration, it'd be interesting to read Noah's take on to what degree highly concentrated market sectors--like Airlines, Banks, Meat Packers, etc.--have on A) Depressing industry wages, and B) Overcharging consumers.

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