Current:Home > reviewsFTC chair Lina Khan on playing "anti-monopoly" -ApexWealth
FTC chair Lina Khan on playing "anti-monopoly"
View
Date:2025-04-13 23:20:28
Monopoly is the game where you bankrupt competitors, buying up the board and charging sky-high prices. But in Washington, Lina Khan is playing a different game: Anti-Monopoly. "The experience is not quite akin to playing a board game, but there are challenges and unpredictable swerves," said Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission.
And she has rolled the dice, with one buzzy lawsuit after another, going after Big Tech (suing Microsoft to block its proposed $69 billion acquisition of Activision), Big Pharma (suing to block Amgen's $27.8 billion deal to acquire Horizon Therapeutics), even Big Grocery (suing to stop a proposed $25 billion deal between Kroger and Albertsons, the largest grocery store merger in U.S. history).
The FTC is an independent watchdog and warden of competition in business. "When you have companies that are not disciplined by competition, oftentimes they can get away with abusing their customers; firms can become too big to care," said Khan. "There can be this basic indignity of being a consumer in America today. And that's what the FTC's trying to fix."
Khan finds inspiration in the Golden Age of trust-busting, when government broke up big oil and the railroads. She views recent decades as government being too lax, even too cozy with big business: "There was a clear policy decision back in the '80s that it was better for the government to be hands-off. I think several decades on, we're really living with the costs of those decisions."
One of those costly decisions, she said, was consolidation of the U.S. aerospace industry. "Over the last few months we've seen firsthand how Boeing not being checked by competition in the marketplace has led to all sorts of issues," she said.
Khan's biggest case so far? Amazon, arguing the retailer's tactics punish sellers over prices. "It can de-list them from the buy box, make them disappear from the search results page effectively," said Khan. "Amazon knows that a lot of small businesses live in constant terror of Amazon, because they know that with the press of a single button, a business can see its sales drop by 80% or 90%. Overnight a business can be looking at bankruptcy or liquidation if it gets on the wrong side of Amazon."
Amazon is fighting back, and says its practices provide good deals for customers.
- FTC and 17 states file sweeping antitrust suit against Amazon
- Amazon sued for allegedly signing customers up for Prime without consent
- Amazon used algorithm to essentially raise prices on other sites, FTC says
Khan's scrutiny of the online megastore began as a star law school student, and that stardom has only grown for the 35-year-old, earning praise from so-called "Khanservatives." Republican Senator J.D. Vance described Khan as "one of the few people in the Biden administration that I actually think is doing a pretty good job."
Her critics are just as fervent, casting her as an overreaching, anti-business crusader. "Mad Money" host Jim Cramer labeled Khan "a one-woman wrecking crew for your stock portfolio," and at a July 2023 committee hearing, Republican Congressman Darrell Issa called her "a bully."
Asked whether she thinks there is a risk for the FTC to take an aggressive approach against big companies, Khan said, "Our focus is on making sure that we are enforcing the rule of law. And I see an enormous amount at risk if you instead sit on your hands and don't address the problems that people face in their day-to-day lives."
Khan's next move? Investigating pharmacy benefit managers, including OptumRx, Express Scripts and CVS Caremark.
In Philadelphia this month she met with independent pharmacists, who say these prescription drug middlemen are hurting their bottom lines and their patients. [According to the National Community Pharmacists Association, more than 300 independent pharmacies shut their doors in 2023.]
One man at the meeting told Khan, "My voice is asking, it's pleading with you: something has to be done."
Whether it's on the road or in court, Lina Khan wants corporate America on alert: the only place you can get a monopoly is a board game.
For more info:
- Lina Khan, chair, Federal Trade Commission
Story produced by Dustin Stephens. Editor: Joseph Frandino.
- In:
- Federal Trade Commission
Robert Costa is the Chief Election & Campaign correspondent for CBS News, where he covers national politics and American democracy.
TwitterveryGood! (4)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- NYPD recruit who died during training is honored at police academy graduation
- Panel recommends removing ex-chancellor from Wisconsin college faculty post for making porn videos
- 3 adults found dead after an early morning apartment fire in suburban Phoenix
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Second day of jury deliberations to start in Sen. Bob Menendez’s bribery trial
- On Mac and Cheese Day, a look at how Kraft’s blue box became a pantry staple
- 1 killed, 6 injured when pickup truck collides with horse-drawn buggy in Virginia
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Halloween decor drop: Home Depot's 12-foot skeleton, 7-foot Skelly dog go on sale soon
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Son of Asia's richest man gets married in the year's most extravagant wedding
- James B. Sikking, 'Hill Street Blues' and 'Doogie Howser, M.D.' actor, dies at 90
- Charmed's Holly Marie Combs Honors Fierce Fighter Shannen Doherty After Her Death
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Biden addresses Trump rally shooting in Oval Office address: Politics must never be a literal battlefield
- 4 people fatally shot outside a Mississippi home
- 'House of the Dragon' mutt returns for Episode 5 showing dogs rule
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Halloween decor drop: Home Depot's 12-foot skeleton, 7-foot Skelly dog go on sale soon
Watch as Biden briefs reporters after Trump rally shooting: 'No place in America for this'
Rare switch-pitcher Jurrangelo Cijntje 'down to do everything' for Mariners after MLB draft
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Battered by Hurricane Idalia last year, Florida village ponders future as hurricane season begins
At least 7 dead after separate shootings in Birmingham, Alabama, authorities say
Pauly Shore Honors “One of a Kind” Richard Simmons After Fitness Icon’s Death