Bad policy, pure and simple.The Department of Justice announced a few weeks ago that Oracle's takeover of PeopleSoft violates antitrust law antitrust law Any law restricting business practices that are considered unfair or monopolistic. Among U.S. laws, the best known is the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, which declared illegal “every contract, combination…or conspiracy in restraint of trade or , stating that "we believe this transaction is anti-competitive--pure and simple." Ironically, in the same week the Supreme Court, in United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. Postal Service postal service, arrangements made by a government for the transmission of letters, packages, and periodicals, and for related services. Early courier systems for government use were organized in the Persian Empire under Cyrus, in the Roman Empire, and in medieval v. Flamingo Industries, decided that the massive United States Postal Service is exempt from all antitrust laws antitrust laws n. acts adopted by Congress to outlaw or restrict business practices considered to be monopolistic or which restrain interstate commerce. The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 declared illegal "every contract, combination.... . Yet anticompetitive an·ti·com·pet·i·tive adj. That discourages competition among businesses: anticompetitive foreign trade restrictions. behavior by the Postal Service is more harmful to consumers, competitors, and the overall economy than most private sector mergers. The Postal Service enjoys a government-enforced monopoly over the delivery of all letters. Yet it competes in a wide and increasing array of businesses in which private firms are already active, including package and express delivery; it has recently ventured into selling a variety of retail merchandise and e-commerce services (most of which are unrelated to postal services). A major concern is that the Postal Service will use funds from monopolized delivery services, where it holds customers captive, to underprice un·der·price tr.v. un·der·priced, un·der·pric·ing, un·der·pric·es 1. To price lower than the real, normal, or appropriate value. 2. in businesses where it faces competition. Given that the final authority to set rates rests not with its regulator, the Postal Rate Commission Noun 1. Postal Rate Commission - an independent federal agency that recommends changes in postal rates independent agency - an agency of the United States government that is created by an act of Congress and is independent of the executive departments , but with the Postal Service itself, that fear is justified. Moreover, the best available estimates (given the Postal Service's poor accounting data) indicate that it has earned losses on many products where it faces competition. Underpricing Underpricing Issuing securities at less than their market value. underpricing The pricing of a new security issue at less than the prevailing price of the same security in the secondary market. Underpricing helps ensure a successful sale. is thus nearly a certainty. Various other concerns have arisen about the Postal Service's competitive activities. In addition to monopoly power, it is exempt from all taxation. It can borrow from the Treasury at government-guaranteed rates. It has the power of eminent domain eminent domain, the right of a government to force the owner of private property sell it if it is needed for a public use. The right is based on the doctrine that a sovereign state has dominion over all lands and buildings within its borders, which has its origins in and is excused from SEC disclosure requirements. It is not required to pay parking tickets or registration fees on its vehicles. It is immune from antitrust laws and is not subject to Federal Trade Commission truth-in-advertising regulations, meaning that it can assert anything it wishes in ads. All those valuable government-bestowed privileges allow the Postal Service to inefficiently and unfairly compete with private firms. The Postal Service is able to force private firms out of business by virtue of its special privileges, rather than through superior management acumen, better labor relations, or indeed any business-related skills. It can offer any competitive service it wishes at any time at any price without any regulatory oversight whatsoever. This is bad policy. Consumers will be hurt because the costs of those ventures will be passed on to them through higher rates in monopolized activities and because they will face less choice after the Postal Service has forced competitors out of business. Competitors will go out of business, shrink, or not start up in the first place in the face of unfair competition from the Postal Service. Finally, state and local governments will lose tax revenue when the Postal Service forces out taxpaying businesses. The executive and legislative branches should act. The Postal Service ought to be kept out of competitive activities entirely. Better still, it should be relieved of all government-granted privileges, including monopoly power. This situation is anticompetitive, pure and simple, and it should be changed. Rick Geddes is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace is a public policy think tank and library founded by Herbert Hoover at Stanford University, his alma mater. The Institution was founded in 1919 and over time has amassed a huge archive of documentation related to President and assistant professor in the Department of Policy Analysis and Management at Cornell University. Geddes is the editor of Competing with the Government: Anticompetitive Behavior and Public Enterprises (Hoover Press, 2004). |
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