Why Millennials Should Care about Antitrust
This blog is part of Caffeinated Commentary – a monthly series where the Millennial Fellows create interesting and engaging content around a theme. This month, each fellow has been charged by fellowship director Reid Cramer to explain why anyone, but especially millennials, should care about the specific policy interests they鈥檙e passionate about.
As my graduation date loomed closer, professors, relatives, and even well-meaning strangers asked with increasing frequency and judgment, 鈥淪o, do you know what you鈥檙e doing next?鈥 I considered myself lucky鈥擨 had finalized my post-graduation plans soon after graduation. Armed with a newly minted degree, I joined the workforce full-time in 2015, helping millennials surpass Generation X in becoming the largest generation in the U.S. labor force.
According to the Pew Research Center, at the time were millennials, adults born between roughly 1980 and 2000. Yet, many of my peers were not part of this statistic; that same year.
Those of us who are employed do not seem to fare any better, with recent newspaper headlines reading and In 2015, an were not in school and making less than $10,000 annually. Confronted with , it follows that an estimated 70 million millennials have less income to spend and are more keenly feeling the harsh effects of income inequality, which further exacerbates wealth inequality in turn.
Many have suggested a link between this disconcerting state of accelerating inequality and market concentration, a link that drives the current populist movement in antitrust. While market concentration does not necessarily equate market power, there is growing concern over firms鈥 market power鈥攁 term that in antitrust lexicon refers to the ability of sufficiently large companies to raise prices alone or prevent new competition from undercutting high prices in their respective markets; the term may not be used consistently in this way, however. Economist Joseph Stiglitz has written about the role of 鈥 in driving up prices for consumers and lowering both workers鈥 wages and the standard of living. Notwithstanding differences in philosophies toward the nature of antitrust in addressing market concentration, numerous , , and have advocated for antitrust law and competition policy to specifically address this growing inequality through a wide range of policy initiatives, including more robust antitrust enforcement or incorporating the potential effects of a merger on employment in antitrust analysis.
As the largest generation in today鈥檚 labor force and earners of disproportionately low wages, millennials have a key stake in the policy arena surrounding antitrust and competition policy. Though antitrust law may seem niche or abstract, it is part of the larger body of law that plays an active role in through the construction of wealth, power, and race. Jobs, occupational licenses, and intellectual property are all concepts mediated by law, which protects and upholds private interests, drawing boundaries and enforcing existing regimes of power. Law and legal institutions have at times , perpetuating racial privilege by regulating access to voting, transportation, education, and employment.
Similarly, the effects of antitrust law can be seen in the conditions it sets up around millennials鈥 lives. Antitrust law aims to promote fair competition. Fair competition means ensuring that small business owners have a fair chance at succeeding in their business ventures, which matters because older millennials are over 50 percent more likely to . Fair competition means preventing firms from rolling out unjustified higher prices to consumers, which matters because this enables millennials to stretch their disproportionately low salaries further and potentially begin accumulating wealth. Fair competition means to yield higher wages and better benefits, which matters because 鈥攎ore likely to be millennials鈥攖han senior ones.
Renata Hesse in her former role as Acting Assistant Attorney General of the Department of Justice Antitrust Division : 鈥淚n general, competition is fair because it distributes these rewards broadly to participants in the economy. But when companies harm competition 鈥 choking off competition or agreeing with rivals not to compete 鈥 they infect the economy with unfairness by accumulating power that the few can wield at the expense of the broader American public.鈥 She deemed the goal of antitrust law to promote 鈥渆conomic fairness,鈥 a term that more vigorously invokes egalitarianism ideals than 鈥渇air competition鈥 does鈥攁 reframing that satiates populist demands while still emphasizing outcomes that antitrust and competition policy already work toward.
There is a prevalent stereotype that , reinforced by the aforementioned statistics. But by unpacking this stereotype and examining the context in which millennials struggle to find employment and make a living, we may begin to realize the ways in which constraints on opportunities imposed by firms that abuse market power significantly deter millennials. In the midst of heightened popular interest and the in antitrust, we as a society are at a critical juncture in contemplating how we would like to structure policies鈥攂oth inside and outside the realm of antitrust鈥攖hat have tangible implications on everyday lives. Millennials, too, have a stake in this policy debate.