James C. Miller III. Opening Remarks

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Transcription:

1 Lessons Since the Reagan Revolution at the FTC: A 30-Year Perspective on Competition and Consumer Policies George Mason University Law & Economics Center September 30, 2011 James C. Miller III Opening Remarks Thanks, Dean Polsby, for authorizing this event. Thank you, Henry (Butler), for conceiving and organizing the event. Thank all of you participants for your contributions. And finally, thanks to Dean Manne, for whom this series is named, and who has done so much to enlighten us all about the potential and limits of government regulation and who is a true founder of the law and economics movement. I d like to say a few words to those here, and to those who could not be here, who were part of the team that orchestrated the reforms that are the touchstone of today s event. It is rare in government that you see the spontaneous coming together of women and men of such talent and resolve. Our merry band included people who were lifelong friends, people who had never met, people who were truly outsiders, and people who were longtime employees of the agency. It was a remarkable team of people with different strengths and weaknesses, who by and large organized themselves according to the principle of comparative advantage, and who, though on occasion disagreed on tactics, always respected each other and stayed true to the shared objective. I want to thank each of you for your time at the FTC, and the country should thank you as well. Specifically, I want to thank you for your sacrifices not that the work was drudgery, but because of your opportunity costs. On occasion, the work was particularly difficult to endure, but it had its many rewards, including much levity. Who could forget the frequent letters we received from Bruce Yandle s cousin, commenting on the FTC s goin s on? And those Christmas parties, including those commissioner videos? And Bob Tollison s abolishing the Office of Policy and Planning without telling anyone? And Carol Cawford s penetrating stare, when she would say, are you sure you want to do this? Or, simply why? Or Chris Brewster s letter, published in the Washington Post, written to Merry Spaethe in the voice of a Visogoth? Or Wally Snider s slow, interminable trips through the building to hastily-called meetings about health-care issues when actually he was jogging from his office on 12 th Street? Or welcoming Joe Califano to the Star Chamber during the debate over the proposed GM-Toyota joint venture? Or our running team, named by Andy Strenio, Commission Impossible? Or Gyro Gearloose at the FTC? Or one night winning a marathon contest with the learned professions seeking an

2 exemption from FTC antitrust authority with not just a little help from the Vice President and Senator Rudman! What was our objective and what was our game plan? By and large they were the objectives and recommendations contained in the Reagan-Bush Transition Report on the FTC, in which a number of later FTC officials were an integral part. I suspect that this transition report was considered one of the Transition s best, because it was one of only two that were leaked to the press not by the team working on it, but by the senior Transition operation. Undoubtedly, the transition team s sparkplug was Timothy J. Muris, who had a penchant for walking the halls of the FTC building during the transition and before the inauguration exclaiming, We re going to retry Humphreys Executor! which made it hard for the team when we arrived! The transition report concluded that the FTC, as an agency, had put itself in great jeopardy because of its forays into social engineering and the relative neglect of fundamental competition and consumer protection responsibilities. Later, one of our colleagues, Tom Campbell, dubbed this Star Trek law enforcement to boldly go where no man or woman had dared go before. The conclusion was that we should return the FTC to its more traditional role and to do this with greater effectiveness and at lower cost. Generally, the transition report concluded that: (a) the FTC should acquire new leadership; (b) it should give economists a greater role in case selection and prosecution; (c) imperfections in regulation should be addressed alongside imperfections in the marketplace; (d) businesses should be given more guidance on how to avoid violating the FTC s statutes; and (e) the agency should show a greater appreciation for the efficiency of free markets vs. heavy-handed regulation and recognize, as Ronald Reagan was fond of saying, that sometimes government is not the solution, but rather is the problem. As you know, the report listed 29 specific recommendations. In three years time, we had implemented 25 of these, had made substantial progress on two more, had plans to implement another, and had one blocked by Congress. One of my favorite results was a newspaper story heralding, The FTC Won t be a National Nanny Anymore. A few antidotes stick in my mind about things we discovered and addressed at the FTC that were not covered in the transition report. When a senior career official was asked, What do we own? he had no idea -- said he d never been asked that question before. Bruce Yandle discovered that the Bureau of Labor Statistics metric of the agency s productivity was the number of lawsuits it brought per employee in contradiction of the common-sense notion that a lawsuit is an admission of regulatory failure, not success. A check into open cases revealed that there were thousands, the vast majority of which had been dormant for many years. The response was, But no one being investigated has

3 complained. Yes, and that s like expecting someone to complain to the IRS about why their audit had been put on hold. And, incredibly, we found that there was no tracking system for Congressional mail and no guidelines for responses a shortcoming remedied immediately by Wallace Tinker s weekly visit to those assigned to draft responses. We did accomplish a lot redirecting the agency, slowly and methodically, like changing the course of an ocean-going vessel. But we also recognized that such reforms could be undone after we left. Accordingly, we went about trying to prevent recidivism in a number of ways. We endeavored to teach the highlymotivated career staff that the approach we advocated to competition and consumer protection matters was the one most efficient is serving the true interests of consumers. We highlighted our constructive engagement approach to business, in hopes that would carry the day among the agency s various constituents, including Congress. Of course, we recognized that some of the changes we had made might rightfully be adjudged in error by future administrations of the agency. We also recognized that issues inevitably would change, demanding a refocus of the agency s attention and resources. But we were quite confident that the principles we espoused were correct, that they would endure, and that should the agency stray very far from them in the future, it, as well as the American people, would suffer. What we are about today is discussing not so much what the Reagan Administration of the FTC did or didn t do, but what came after and why. Presenters here include representatives and observers of the FTC since the days of the Reagan Administration. Like you, I look forward to what they have to say and what we can learn about appropriate directions for the agency in the future. But I do want to acknowledge the constructive contributions of all my former Commissionercolleagues. We all profited from our frequent exchanges and the hard work they all exerted. While it was difficult at times, owing to strong personalities and even more strongly-held views, it was not, as Senator Jack Danforth once queried at a Congressional hearing, a game of Rollerball. I also want to salute the Commission s senior staff and advisors to the chairman those who guided the agency through this controversial time. Among them in the future were: (a) a law-school dean and FTC chairman; (b) a U.S. bankruptcy judge; (c) a law-school professor, business-school dean, and member of Congress; (d) a distinguished university professor and President of the Southern Economic Association; (e) an Associate Director of OMB, an Assistant Attorney General, and a Member of the International Trade Commission; (f) a director of congressional affairs at OMB, an Assistant Secretary of Treasury, and leader of a major lobbying firm; (g) an Administrator

4 of Information and Regulator Affairs at OMB and Chairman of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission; (h) a prolific writer and dean of the business school at a major university; (i) a distinguished private-sector attorney and Chair of the American Bar Association s Antitrust Division; (j) an Assistant to the President and founder of her own public affairs company; (k) a press secretary for the First Lady; and (l) a General Counsel of OMB, a distinguished private attorney, and a Deputy Attorney General of New York. To all these and more I say, thank you for your service to the nation. And thank you very much for your attention this morning. Closing Remarks From various experts, we learned today that: (a) the precursors of the Reagan Administration of the FTC were social regulators, generally hostile to business: (b) the Reagan team changed this showing, among other things, an appreciation for the new learning in antitrust; and (c) by and large the Reagan polices have endured over the years, even perfected in various ways. However, adherence to these principles by the current FTC is questionable, as there is considerable overreaching. The major problems are in consumer protection. The ad substantiation program has been tightened to the point that valuable information is being denied to consumers, and in general the staff is not following the kind of explicit or even implicit benefit-cost analysis that is key to sensible consumer protection case selection and prosecution. The old questions about the appropriateness of dual enforcement of the antitrust laws are still around. The evidence leads to the conclusion that cooperation over case selection results in fewer lawsuits at higher cost which begs the question: is this good or bad? Dual enforcement can lead to problems of inconsistency in policies and their application, thus confusing those subject to the agencies actions. And finally, there are reasons to doubt the efficiency of collegial decisionmaking. The open-endedness of Section 5 s unfairness standard is still a problem for both the agency and for those subject to its jurisdiction. Leaving too much discretion to the agency invites overreaching and the uncertainty stifles business initiative. The preliminary evidence is that FTC antitrust decisions (at least since the early 1980s) are less likely to be overturned on appeal than antitrust decisions by district courts. This suggests value in preserving such expertise.

5 Today s discussions prompt several observations on my part. For example, mention was made of the merger guidelines that the Antitrust Division issued in the early 1980s. There was no mention, however, of the merger guidelines issued by the FTC a few days later and which guided our case selection, and prosecution including settlement negotiations. On the question of accountability, as I have noted elsewhere, there were times when, as chairman, I despaired of having to answer to 435 Members of the House, 100 Senators, and the President of the United States. On the other hand, as long as I avoided much controversy, I felt I answered to no one. This, I submit, is not good government. You shouldn t have unelected officials feeling they are not really accountable. Of those times where I did feel oversight from Congress, the most difficult were those numerous instances when Members of Congress called to fix cases. On each such occasion, I refused, informing the person on the call that they were welcome to provide their views, but that these would be put on the record. In some cases, the person protested, but did not get what they wanted. On more than one occasion, I was called by a member of the FTC staff, who had been ordered to a Member of Congress to meet with their constituent and settle the matter. In each case I ordered the official not to go and instead contacted the Member myself and informed them of the rules. In this, I should note, Committee Chairman John Dingell was a strong ally offering his protection from any and all retaliation for my refusal to do some other Members (inappropriate) bidding. Now, a word about our record on appeal. Not one case in which I wrote a dissent was upheld on appeal. Only two appealed cases in which I affirmed violation were overturned. The first, Mass. Movers, was overturned, based on Supreme Court dictum after the case had been decided. The second, Indiana Federation of Dentists, was overturned on appeal. However, we sought to have DOJ appeal the case to the Supreme Court. DOJ declined. The Commission then asked DOJ to reconsider. DOJ declined. A career staff member of the FTC pointed out that the governing law gives DOJ only right of first refusal in representing the FTC, and that if they decline the FTC can represent itself. In a narrow vote, and against the recommendation of the agency s General Council, the FTC chose to appeal on its own behalf. The Court not only granted cert., but overturned. Finally, one measure of the importance of the reforms initiated by the Reagan team in the early 1980s is that since then there have been no credible calls for terminating the agency. But those who value the FTC should take note of concerns expressed at this conference and make sure that overreaching never threatens the agency again.

Thank you George Mason Law for sponsoring this program, and thank you all very much for coming. 6