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How regulators pretend to be corporate CEOs

Published in Blog on July 17, 2017 by Convention Of States Project

A successful local restaurateur decided to expand, so she acquired another restaurant across town. Thinking she could improve the food and enlarge her business, she headed to city hall to get the necessary licenses and permits. The city clerk told the restaurant owner she had complied with all the laws, but before issuing her updated permits, he wanted clarity on a few things.

The clerk said, "I think we also need a new restaurant on the south side of town; you will open one there as well, won't you?" He continued, "And this isn't actually part of the health code, but I think every restaurant needs to offer a vegan option; you will, won't you?" The clerk observed, "Most restaurants offer seniors a 10 percent discount; I prefer 20 percent, don't you?"

The restaurateur got the picture: Do all the things the city clerk wanted or give up on the new restaurant.

This is a classic example of the rule of man rather than the rule of law. It leads to cronyism, and experience and academic studies confirm that it leads to lower economic growth and less prosperity.

While we may not think this happens in America, substitute "federal or state government" for "city clerk" and "corporation" for "restaurateur," and sadly it is a pretty accurate picture of what many companies face today when seeking regulatory approval for a merger or acquisition.

Lest you think I exaggerate, consider the conditions the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) announced as part of approval of the Charter Communications/Time Warner Cable merger.

To win approval, the new company must agree to abide by certain "business conduct rules," including refraining for seven years from charging customers based on their data usage; abiding by the FCC's net neutrality rules even if a court strikes them down; building out their broadband network to 2 million additional homes, including 1 million homes which already have broadband access; and hiring an independent monitor to ensure they comply with all the government's various demands.

These types of conditions are increasingly common.

  • As a condition of approving the proposed Aetna-Humana merger, Florida required the insurer to expand its coverage in certain counties covered by the state's health insurance exchange. With insurers threatening to leave the federal exchange, might federal regulators expand on this idea?
  • Regulators required, as a condition of approving the AT&T-DirecTV merger, that the company offer discounted broadband to low-income consumers even though the analysis revealed that the merger would have very little effect on broadband prices. As a dissenting FCC commissioner noted, "the Commission just can't pass up an opportunity to push its own objectives, even if it is unrelated to the matter at hand."
  • To secure regulatory approval, Comcast and NBC-Universal promised that 10 NBC-owned TV stations would produce an additional 1,000 hours of original, local news programming — a requirement completely divorced from maintaining competition.
  • The DOJ required Google, as a condition of acquiring a software company that provided tools to search online for airfares, to continue funding research and development related to the existing software and to promise to develop the next generation of software. Google is required to allow the government to interview their employees about compliance for five years.

Click here to read more from The Hill.

Unreasonable, unpredictable regulations like these hurt businesses, which hurts the economy and the American worker. Even if you don't work for Time Warner Cable, you probably get cable service from them. These regulations only serve to make your monthly payment that much higher.

It's time to keep federal bureaucrats in their place. An Article V Convention of States can propose constitutional amendments that actually limit the jurisdiction of our rulemakers in Washington, D.C. This means that the reach of their regulations and the kinds of things they can regulate will be greatly diminished.

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