-Caveat Lector-

Antitrust and Microsoft
by Dominick Armentano

The Microsoft Corporation's continuing difficulties
with the Department of Justice, even after an appeals
court ruled in the company's favor, reveal the
absurdity of attempting to apply 19th-century
antitrust law to a 21st-century computer and
telecommunications marketplace.

Microsoft had licensed its Windows operating system
to PC makers on the condition that they also take
(at no charge) its Internet browser, Explorer. If
the operating system and the browser are in fact
separate products, then this arrangement is a so-called
"tying agreement" forbidden by a 1995 consent decree
between Microsoft and the Department of Justice. But
Microsoft claimed that its browser function has
now been fully integrated into Windows and that the
consent decree explicitly allows it to sell "integrated"
products.

On December 11, 1997, District Judge Thomas Jackson
ruled against Microsoft and ordered that the company
make Windows and its browser available (to PC makers)
separately. On June 23, 1998, the appeals court
overturned the lower court's ruling on grounds that
the products were indeed "integrated." Moreover, the
court said, "antitrust scholars have long recognized
the undesirability of having courts oversee product
design."

Currently Section 1 of the Sherman Act (1890) and
Section 3 of the Clayton Act (1914) prohibit tying
agreements that "restrain trade substantially." In
addition, there is a vast antitrust case law that
forbids firms with dominant market shares in one
product (the tying good) from requiring buyers to
take a second product (the tied good) as a condition
of sale or lease.

Whether Microsoft's Window and browser are integrated
or "tied" products will be a continuing concern for
the courts and the government. Yet beyond that, the
legal skirmish raises the more important issue
addressed by the appeals court: do we really want
government antitrust attorneys and the courts
determining the pace and scope of innovation in the
computer and telecommunications industry?

Can Microsoft or any other software company continue
to integrate computer applications with operating
system software? Or is technological change to be
put on hold or redirected as we discover what computer
products the government or the courts will allow to be
sold? Aside from the merits of the antitrust issues,
to put such decisions in the hands of government is
economic lunacy of the highest order.

Is there any merit to the argument that Microsoft
has engaged in illegal tying and the products ought
to be "separated" by force of law? The appropriate
perspective for any analysis of tying agreements is
the self-interest of consumers. Prospective PC buyers
are no different from any other consumers. They want
as much total product as they can get for the lowest
cost. And from a consumer perspective, Windows with
(free) Explorer (integrated or tied) is better than
Windows without Explorer or with Explorer at some
additional cost.

It is incorrect to hold that PC manufacturers are
"coerced" into taking Explorer as the government
maintains. The simple fact is that PC users want
Explorer with their Windows. No PC manufacturer could
risk selling its product without including Explorer
when other rival PC manufacturers would be free to
provide Explorer at no consumer cost. This is the
basic reason that PC manufacturers accept Microsoft's
licensing condition that Explorer be included.
Competition in the PC market aligns the consumer's
interest with that of Microsoft.

Even accepting that Microsoft "ties" two different
products, the antitrust issue is whether the tying
restrains trade substantially. Here the government
is on weaker ground still. Trade might be restrained
if the Microsoft licensing agreement contained a
clause forbidding the licensee PC maker from
installing "competitive" browsers or dealing in
the products of a competitor of Microsoft. Such
language was  common in several celebrated tying
contract cases tried decades ago.

But Microsoft places no outside restraint on PC makers
with respect to the installation of competitive products,
including browsers. In any case, from a marketing
perspective, such contractual restrictions are often
counterproductive; in evolving market competition,
consumer desire for the best product at the lowest
price eventually prevails.

Antitrust enthusiasts have also argued that trade could
be restrained if Microsoft's tying agreement (or product
integration) sharply reduced the sales of competitive
browsers. But this theory of restraint makes no economic
sense. Overall trade is not restrained when some firms
do more business while other firms do less. Further, if
it is assumed that Microsoft's browser is actually
superior to the competitive browser it replaces-and
certainly, its zero price is superior-then overall
trade has been expanded, not restrained, by the tie-in
or integration.

Netscape Communications Corporation complained that
Microsoft has leveraged the success of its Windows
operating system into browsers at Netscape's expense.
True, perhaps, but Microsoft ought not be condemned
for the consumer acceptance of the total Microsoft
package and for the fact that Netscape has no such
competitive package. The analogy with baseball would
be the rational preference by team management (and fans)
for ballplayers who perform well both defensively and
offensively. Good defensive players who can't hit may
just never make the majors.

Netscape, apparently, would prefer a so-called "level
playing field" where firms sold only operating systems
or browsers and where no one had any other advantages.
But this is a variation of the silly argument used
often to justify protectionism in international trade.
Business organizations that can't compete are always
complaining that their competitors have unfair advantages
that the law should condemn. That antitrust has now
stooped to adopt totally discredited trade theory
fallacies is clear evidence of its intellectual
bankruptcy.

What started as a "semantic" disagreement over a 1995
consent decree has escalated into a battle over government
regulation of product innovation and even over the future
of antitrust law in the U.S. The government cannot
intelligently micro-manage business innovation and
neither can the free market effectively restrain trade.
This case against Microsoft should be ended and federal
lawmakers should begin a long overdue debate over repeal
of all antitrust regulation.

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