Video now available for TPI Event – Big Tech Antitrust Reform Proposals: Good Policy or Counterproductive?

Video now available for TPI Event – Big Tech Antitrust Reform Proposals: Good Policy or Counterproductive?

In case you missed last Wednesday’s discussion on Congress’ recently proposed antitrust bills, it is now available on YouTube. See below for a full description of the panel: 

Congress is currently engaged in a bipartisan effort to enact the first major antitrust legislation in 45 years. A package of six reform proposals, based on the House Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee’s 2020 report on its “Investigation into Competition in Digital Markets,” were approved by the full Judiciary Committee this past June. Companion bills have also been introduced in the Senate. These bills, which cover a wide range of activities, are all specifically targeted at the leading tech companies.

The panelists discussed the costs and benefits of these proposals and whether they represent good policy or counterproductive measures.

Panel:

  • Judith ChevalierProfessor of Finance and Business, Yale School of Organization and Management
  • Maureen OhlhausenPartner and Co-chair, Antitrust and Competition law practice, Baker Botts and former Acting Chair, Federal Trade Commission
  • Carl Shapiro, Professor at the Haas School of Business and the Department of Economics UC Berkeley and former Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Economics, Antitrust Division
  • Lawrence WhiteProfessor of Economics, NYU Stern School of Business and former Chief Economist, Antitrust Division
  • Joshua WrightProfessor and Executive Director of the Global Antitrust Institute at the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason and former Commissioner, Federal Trade Commission
  • Thomas Lenard (moderator), President Emeritus and Senior Fellow, Technology Policy Institute
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