Published , by Chris Jarrard
Published , by Chris Jarrard
The Biden administration took action earlier today against anti-competitive practices across a variety of industries by way of an executive order. The order includes a total of 72 directives and/or recommendations and covers issues related to non-compete clauses, net neutrality, and corporate consolidation.
Some of the goals and initiatives in the executive order include:
The White House argues that consolidated power amongst the biggest companies in the country has had a negative impact on wages and competition. Biden’s executive order also asks the FTC to create rules for data collection and user surveillance practices and asks the agency to prohibit certain unfair methods of competition for online marketplaces.
“The impulse for this executive order is really around where can we encourage greater competition across the board,” the White House’s chief economic advisor, Brian Deese, told CNBC. The order comes after years of concerns that the world’s biggest tech firms had grown too large and unfairly stifled smaller companies from having a chance to grow in existing and emerging markets. The ball is now in the court of the regulatory agencies that will hold additional power as a direct result of this order.