~~for educational purposes only~~

Anti-trust, Anti-truth
By Thomas J. DiLorenzo

Joel Klein, the third-rate lawyer/political hack
who is in charge of the government's Microsoft
persecution, recently tried to rationalize the
lawsuit by saying that it was in keeping with the
long history of consumer protection regulation,
beginning with the Sherman Antitrust Act of
1890. In reality, the history of antitrust has
been a history of politically-inspired witch hunts
launched against America's most innovative and
entrepreneurial businesses.

In the June 1985 issue of the International
Review of Law and Economics I showed that the
industries accused of "monopolization" by Senator
Sherman and his colleagues in 1890 were expanding
production four times more rapidly than the
economy as a whole for the decade prior to the
Sherman Act (some as much as ten times faster)
and were dropping their prices even faster
than the general price level was falling during
that deflationary period.

The trusts "have made products cheaper, have
reduced prices," admitted Congressman William
Mason, who nevertheless was in favor of an
anti-trust law. He was in favor of the law
because he, and most of his congressional
colleagues, wanted to protect less-efficient
businesses in their districts from competition.
Antitrust has always been a protectionist racket.

Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, the grossly
biased judge in the Microsoft case, has
frequently compared Bill Gates to John D.
Rockefeller, thereby perpetuating another
statist myth -- that Rockefeller's Standard
Oil Company was a "monopoly." But Standard
Oil caused the price of refined petroleum to
fall from over 30 cents per gallon in 1869 to
5.9 cents by 1897 while stimulating an
enormous amount of innovation in the industry,
just as Microsoft has stimulated innovation
in today's computer industry. For this great
service to consumers, Rockefeller was
prosecuted and forced to break up his company.

In his masterpiece, Antitrust and Monopoly:
Anatomy of a Policy Failure, Dominick Armentano
carefully examined fifty-five of the most famous
antitrust cases in U.S. history and concluded
that in every single case, the accused firms
were dropping prices, expanding production,
innovating, and generally benefiting consumers.
It was their less-efficient competitors who
were "harmed," as they should have been.

For example, the American Tobacco Company was
found guilty of "monopolization" in 1911, even
though the price of cigarettes (per thousand)
had declined from $2.77 in 1895 to $2.20 in
1907, despite a 40 percent increase in raw
material costs.

In what is perhaps the best example of nonsensical
double-talk in antitrust history, in 1944 Judge
Learned Hand found Alcoa guilty of "monopolizing"
the virgin ingot aluminum market by employing
"superior skill and foresight" which the judge
feared had "forestalled" competition by those
businesses with less skill and foresight. He
condemned Alcoa for being extremely adept at
correctly anticipating market demand for its
product and then supplying that demand, to the
"exclusion" of its less efficient competitors.

Alcoa "embraced every new opportunity" with a
"great" organization, said the judge, and manned
the organization with "elite business personnel."
It was obvious to the confused and befuddled
Judge Hand that gaining market share through
entrepreneurial excellence should be illegal.

In 1962 the government forbade the Brown Shoe
Company, which had 1 percent of the shoe market,
from acquiring Kinney Shoes, which also had a 1
percent market share. A company with 2 percent
of the shoe market, according to the government,
constituted a monopoly.

In 1969 IBM, the Microsoft of the day, had a
65 percent market share in the computer market
and was sued by the government for allegedly
monopolizing the industry. IBM was mired in a
court battle for thirteen years before the
government finally gave up on the case.
In the meantime, the company was eclipsed by
Intel and other competitors while Microsoft had
just produced, in 1981, its first copy of MS-DOS.

The government's assault on IBM undoubtedly
weakened the company and weakened the level of
competition in the industry as well. This has
happened time and again as a result of Quixotic
antitrust prosecutions.

In 1962 the government forced the Schwinn
Bicycle Company to divorce itself from its
network of dealers; foreign competition
eventually drove Schwinn into bankruptcy.

General Motors was never prosecuted, but because
of the company's fear of antitrust it was official
company policy from 1937 until 1956 to never let
its market share top 45 percent, for any reason.
This fear of antitrust prosecution contributed
to the industry's dramatic losses in market share
to the Japanese and German automakers during the
1970s and '80s.

RCA was prohibited by antitrust regulators
from charging royalties to American licensees,
so the company licensed its products to Japanese
companies. The entire Japanese electronics
industry is based on this.

Antitrust regulation killed Pan American World
Airways by forbidding it from acquiring domestic
routes. Lacking "feeder" traffic for its
international flights, the company went
bankrupt.

Most Americans have never heard of any of these
facts because they have been fed the Official
History of antitrust, which is that free markets
are a source of monopoly power which must
restrained by enlightened antitrust regulators.

The truth is that monopoly is impossible in a
free market; government is the true source of
monopoly; and antitrust itself has never done
anything but render American industry less
competitive while inflicting great harm on
consumers. The standard account of antitrust
regulation being in "the public interest" is
truly Orwellian.

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