Antitrust Policy and Business Regulation
Read this chapter to learn about how government policies have been in place to curve the power of imperfect competition. Also identify what the US has used regulations to protect consumers and limit the excesses of businesses via antitrust policies.
4. Regulation: Protecting People from the Market
Learning Objectives
- Compare the public interest and public choice theories of regulation.
- Discuss the costs and benefits of consumer protection laws.
- Discuss the pros and cons of the trend toward deregulation over the last quarter century.
Antitrust policies are primarily concerned with limiting the accumulation and use of market power. Government regulation is used to control the choices of private firms or individuals. Regulation may constrain the freedom of firms to
enter or exit markets, to establish prices, to determine product design and safety, and to make other business decisions. It may also limit the choices made by individuals.
In general terms, there are two types of regulatory agencies. One group
attempts to protect consumers by limiting the possible abuse of market power by firms. The other attempts to influence business decisions that affect consumer and worker safety. Regulation is carried out by more than 50 federal agencies that interpret
the applicable laws and apply them in the specific situations they find in real-world markets. Table 16.2 "Selected Federal Regulatory Agencies and Their Missions" lists some of the major federal regulatory agencies, many of which are duplicated at
the state level.
Table 16.2 Selected Federal Regulatory Agencies and Their Missions
Financial Markets | |
---|---|
Federal Reserve Board | Regulates banks and other financial institutions |
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Regulates and insures banks and other financial institutions |
Securities and Exchange Commission | Regulates and requires full disclosure in the securities (stock) markets |
Commodity Futures Trading Commission | Regulates trading in futures markets |
Product Markets | |
Department of Justice, Antitrust Division | Enforces antitrust laws |
Federal Communications Commission | Regulates broadcasting and telephone industries |
Federal Trade Commission | Focuses efforts on consumer protection, false advertising, and unfair trade practices |
Federal Maritime Commission | Regulates international shipping |
Surface Transportation Board | Regulates railroads, trucking, and noncontiguous domestic water transportation |
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission | Regulates pipelines |
Health and Safety | |
Occupational Health and Safety Administration | Regulates health and safety in the workplace |
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration | Regulates and sets standards for motor vehicles |
Federal Aviation Administration | Regulates air and traffic aviation safety |
Food and Drug Administration | Regulates food and drug producers; emphasis on purity, labeling, and product safety |
Consumer Product Safety Commission | Regulates product design and labeling to reduce risk of consumer injury |
Energy and the Environment | |
Environmental Protection Agency | Sets standards for air, water, toxic waste, and noise pollution |
Department of Energy | Sets national energy policy |
Nuclear Regulatory Commission | Regulates nuclear power plants |
Corps of Engineers | Sets policies on construction near rivers, harbors, and waterways |
Labor Markets | |
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission | Enforces antidiscrimination laws in the workplace |
National Labor Relations Board | Enforces rules and regulations governing contract bargaining and labor relations between companies and unions |
Theories of Regulation
Competing explanations for why there is so much regulation range from theories that suggest regulation protects the public interest to those that argue regulation protects the producers or serves the interests of the regulators. The distinction corresponds
to our discussion in the last chapter of the public interest versus the public choice understanding of government policy in general.
The Public Interest Theory of Regulation
The public interest theory of regulation holds that regulators seek to find market solutions that are economically efficient. It argues that the market power of firms in imperfectly competitive markets must be controlled. In the case of natural monopolies
(discussed in an earlier chapter), regulation is viewed as necessary to lower prices and increase output. In the case of oligopolistic industries, regulation is often advocated to prevent cutthroat competition.
The public interest theory of
regulation also holds that firms may have to be regulated in order to guarantee the availability of certain goods and services - such as electricity, medical facilities, and telephone service - that otherwise would not be profitable enough to induce
unregulated firms to provide them in a given community. Firms providing such goods and services are often granted licenses and franchises that prevent competition. The regulatory authority allows the firm to set prices above average cost in the protected
market in order to cover losses in the target community. In this way, the firms are allowed to earn, indeed are guaranteed, a reasonable rate of return overall.
Proponents of the public interest theory also justify regulation of firms by pointing
to externalities, such as pollution, that are not taken into consideration when unregulated firms make their decisions. As we have seen, in the absence of property rights that force the firms to consider all of the costs and benefits of their decisions,
the market may fail to allocate resources efficiently.
The Public Choice Theory of Regulation
The public interest theory of regulation assumes that regulations serve the interests of consumers by restricting the harmful actions of business firms. That assumption, however, is now widely challenged by advocates of the public choice theory of regulation,
which rests on the premise that all individuals, including public servants, are driven by self-interest. They prefer the capture theory of regulation, which holds that government regulations often end up serving the regulated firms
rather than their customers.
Competing firms always have an incentive to collude or operate as a cartel. The public is protected from such collusion by a pervasive incentive for firms to cheat. Capture theory asserts that firms seek licensing
and other regulatory provisions to prevent other firms from entering the market. Firms seek price regulation to prevent price competition. In this view, the regulators take over the role of policing cartel pricing schemes; individual firms in a cartel
would be incapable of doing so themselves.
Because it is practically impossible for the regulatory authorities to have as much information as the firms they are regulating, and because these authorities often rely on information provided by
those firms, the firms find ways to get the regulators to enforce regulations that protect profits. The regulators get "captured" by the very firms they are supposed to be regulating.
In addition to its use of the capture theory, the public
choice theory of regulation argues that employees of regulatory agencies are not an exception to the rule that people are driven by self-interest. They maximize their own satisfaction, not the public interest. This insight suggests that regulatory
agencies seek to expand their bureaucratic structure in order to serve the interests of the bureaucrats. As the people in control of providing government protection from the rigors of the market, bureaucrats respond favorably to lobbyists and special
interests.
Public choice theory views the regulatory process as one in which various groups jockey to pursue their respective interests. Firms might exploit regulation to limit competition. Consumers might seek lower prices or changes in products.
Regulators themselves might pursue their own interests in expanding their prestige or incomes. The abstract goal of economic efficiency is unlikely to serve the interest of any one group; public choice theory does not predict that efficiency will
be a goal of the regulatory process. Regulation might improve on inefficient outcomes, but it might not.
Consumer Protection
Every day we come into contact with regulations designed to protect consumers from unsafe products, unscrupulous sellers, or our own carelessness. Seat belts are mandated in cars and airplanes; drivers must provide proof of liability insurance; deceptive
advertising is illegal; firms cannot run "going out of business" sales forever; electrical and plumbing systems in new construction must be inspected and approved; packaged and prepared foods must carry certain information on their labels; cigarette
packages must warn users of the dangers involved in smoking; gasoline stations must prevent gas spillage; used-car odometers must be certified as accurate. The list of regulations is seemingly endless.
There are often very good reasons behind
consumer protection regulation, and many economists accept such regulation as a legitimate role and function of government agencies. But there are costs as well as benefits to consumer protection.
The Benefits of Consumer Protection
Consumer protection laws are generally based on one of two conceptual arguments. The first holds that consumers do not always know what is best for them. This is the view underlying government efforts to encourage the use of merit goods and discourage
the use of demerit goods. The second suggests that consumers simply do not have sufficient information to make appropriate choices.
Laws prohibiting the use of certain products are generally based on the presumption that not all consumers make
appropriate choices. Drugs such as cocaine and heroin are illegal for this reason. Children are barred from using products such as cigarettes and alcohol on grounds they are incapable of making choices in their own best interest.
Other regulations
presume that consumers are rational but may not have adequate information to make choices. Rather than expect consumers to determine whether a particular prescription drug is safe and effective, for example, federal regulations require the Food and
Drug Administration to make that determination for them.
The benefit of consumer protection occurs when consumers are prevented from making choices they would regret if they had more information. A consumer who purchases a drug that proves
ineffective or possibly even dangerous will presumably stop using it. By preventing the purchase in the first place, the government may save the consumer the cost of learning that lesson.
One problem in assessing the benefits of consumer protection
is that the laws themselves may induce behavioral changes that work for or against the intent of the legislation. For example, requirements for childproof medicine containers appear to have made people more careless with medicines. Requirements that
mattresses be flame-resistant may make people more careless about smoking in bed. In some cases, then, the behavioral changes attributed to consumer protection laws may actually worsen the problem the laws seek to correct.
An early study on
the impact of seat belts on driving behavior indicated that drivers drove more recklessly when using seat belts, presumably because the seat belts made them feel more secure.Sam Peltzman, "The Effects of Automobile Safety Regulations," A recent study,
however, found that this was not the case and suggests that use of seat belts may make drivers more safety-conscious.Alma Cohen and Liran Einan, "The Effects of Mandatory Seat Belt Laws on Driving Behaviour and Traffic Fatalities,".
In any
event, these "unintended" behavioral changes can certainly affect the results achieved by these laws.
The Cost of Consumer Protection
Regulation aimed at protecting consumers can benefit them, but it can also impose costs. It adds to the cost of producing goods and services and thus boosts prices. It also restricts the freedom of choice of individuals, some of whom are willing to take
more risks than others.
Those who demand, and are willing to pay the price for, high-quality, safe, warranted products can do so. But some argue that people who demand and prefer to pay (presumably) lower prices for lower-quality products that
may have risks associated with their use should also be allowed to exercise this preference. By increasing the costs of goods, consumer protection laws may adversely affect the poor, who are forced to purchase higher-quality products; the rich would
presumably buy higher-quality products in the first place.
To assess whether a particular piece of consumer protection is desirable requires a careful look at how it stacks up against the marginal decision rule. The approach of economists is
to attempt to determine how the costs of a particular regulation compare to its benefits.
Economists W. Mark Crain and Thomas D. Hopkins estimated the cost of consumer protection regulation in 2001 and found that the total cost was $843 billion,
or $7,700 per household in the United States.W. Mark Crain and Thomas D. Hopkins, "The Impact of Regulatory Costs on Small Firms,".
Deregulating the Economy
Concern that regulation might sometimes fail to serve the public interest prompted a push to deregulate some industries, beginning in the late 1970s. In 1978, for example, Congress passed the Airline Deregulation Act, which removed many of the regulations
that had prevented competition in the airline industry. Safety regulations were not affected. The results of deregulation included a substantial reduction in airfares, the merger and consolidation of airlines, and the emergence of frequent flier plans
and other marketing schemes designed to increase passenger miles. Not all the consequences of deregulation were applauded, however. Many airlines, unused to the demands of a competitive, unprotected, and unregulated environment, went bankrupt or were
taken over by other airlines. Large airlines abandoned service to small and midsized cities, and although most of these routes were picked up by smaller regional airlines, some consumers complained about inadequate service. Nevertheless, the more
competitive airline system today is probably an improvement over the highly regulated industry that existed in the 1970s. It is certainly cheaper. Table 16.3 "Improvement in Consumer Welfare from Deregulation" suggests that the improvements in consumer
welfare from deregulation through the 1990s have been quite substantial across a broad spectrum of industries that have been deregulated.
Table 16.3 Improvement in Consumer Welfare from Deregulation
Industry | Improvements |
---|---|
Airlines | Average fares are roughly 33% lower in real terms since deregulation, and service frequently has improved significantly. |
Less-than-truckload trucking | Average rates per vehicle mile have declined at least 35% in real terms since deregulation, and service times have improved significantly. |
Truckload trucking | Average rates per vehicle mile have declined by at least 75% in real terms since deregulation, and service times have improved significantly. |
Railroads | Average rates per ton-mile have declined more than 50% in real terms since deregulation, and average transit time has fallen more than 20%. |
Banking | Consumers have benefited from higher interest rates on deposits, from better opportunities to manage risk, and from more banking offices and automated teller machines. |
Natural gas | Average prices for residential customers have declined at least 30% in real terms since deregulation, and average prices for commercial and industrial customers have declined more than 30%. In addition, service has been more reliable as shortages have been almost completely eliminated. |
Economist Clifford Winston found substantial benefits from deregulation in the five industries he studied - airlines, trucking, railroads, banking, and natural gas.
But there are forces working in the opposite direction as well. Many businesses
continue to turn to the government for protection from competition. Public choice theory suggests that more, not less, regulation is often demanded by firms threatened with competition at home and abroad. More and more people seem to demand environmental
protection, including clear air, clean water, and regulation of hazardous waste and toxic waste. Indeed, as incomes rise over time, there is evidence that the demand for safety rises. This market phenomenon began before the birth of regulatory agencies
and can be seen in the decline in unintentional injury deaths over the course of the last hundred years. And there is little reason to expect less demand for regulations in the areas of civil rights, handicapped rights, gay rights, medical care, and
elderly care.
The basic test of rationality - that marginal benefits exceed marginal costs - should guide the formulation of regulations. While economists often disagree about which, if any, consumer protection regulations are warranted, they
do tend to agree that market incentives ought to be used when appropriate and that the most cost-effective policies should be pursued.
Key Takeaways
- Federal, state, and local governments regulate the activities of firms and consumers.
- The public interest theory of regulation asserts that regulatory efforts act to move markets closer to their efficient solutions.
- The public choice theory of regulation argues that regulatory efforts serve private interests, not the public interest.
- Consumer protection efforts may sometimes be useful, but they tend to produce behavioral responses that often negate the effort at protection.
- Deregulation efforts through the 1990s generally produced large gains in consumer welfare, though demand for more regulation is rising in certain areas, especially finance.
Try It!
The deregulation of the airline industry has generally led to lower fares and increased quantities produced. Use the model of demand and supply to show this change. What has happened to consumer surplus in the market? (Hint: You may want to refer back
to the earlier discussion of consumer surplus).