The DOJ's Antitrust Lawsuit Against Google Is a Loser for Consumers
Despite years of Google primacy over Microsoft Bing, usage of Bing has more than doubled over the past three years and continues to grow.

For decades the consumer welfare standard has been the primary basis on which antitrust enforcement decisions are made. That standard asks about the effect actions and market dominance have on actual consumers. Despite this long tradition, the Biden administration is bringing its first major tech antitrust case in U.S. v. Google and their approach will deemphasize the consumer welfare standard.
The lawsuit involving Google and the Department of Justice (DOJ) along with a number of State Attorneys General started oral arguments on September 12. The DOJ alleged that the tech giant is monopolizing the market by contracting with Apple to become the default search engine for the iOS platform. The DOJ claims that Google and Apple will harm consumers with the possibility they could exploit their dominant positions.
Despite this claim of potential harm, the default search deal between Apple and Google provides an attractive service to consumers in an increasingly competitive market. The result of this lawsuit is a deliberate step backward toward a vision of antitrust that seeks to prioritize the welfare of individual competing firms instead of consumers. Where firms are at the center of government concern, consumers invariably lose.
The Value of the Consumer Welfare Standard
Size and large market share or even contractual restraints in a vertical supply chain to promote one company's products over others can improve consumer welfare. That is because economies of scale and effective advertising may make life better for consumers but not competing firms.
Prior to the adoption of the consumer welfare standard, courts used to rule primarily on how other companies were affected under the assumption that maintaining equally competitive companies was the way consumers would benefit. In general, a robustly competitive market benefits consumers, but when that competition is enforced through government regulation the benefits are less clear.
Markets create value through creative destruction, consumers choose which product they prefer at the price they want and those that can't compete go out of business. Consumer choice is at the center of the process. Antitrust enforcement, when focused on simply how many firms are in a market rather than how consumers make choices, actually hurts consumers.
In 1962's Brown Shoe v. United States the Court sided against a merger because it would increase market concentration and harm competitors by lowering prices and increasing quality. The firms competing, not the consumer, were at the center of the decision. The DOJ's case against Google makes a similar argument, an argument that ultimately could lower consumer welfare.
Disabling Rather than Enabling the Digital Revolution
The DOJ's argument misunderstands the modern tech market, ignoring the fact that digital competition has become more fierce than ever. Microsoft is augmenting its search engine with cutting-edge generative AI, Amazon and Apple are invigorating their ad services, and cloud computing is becoming a staple product suite—all of which have clear improvements for consumer welfare.
The facts of the case make clear that Google's contract with Apple does not prevent users from switching to a rival search engine. Despite years of Google primacy over Microsoft Bing, usage of Bing has more than doubled over the past three years and continues to grow. While Microsoft pours money into improving its products with tools such as generative AI, improvements in useability, and strengthening self-preferencing, Google is understandably not standing idle. Google's contract with Apple seeks to streamline ease of use on iOS platforms and boost the effectiveness of its algorithms through increased user activity.
As intense competition from tech titans—each with their own strengths and weaknesses—unfolds, the DOJ should allow open competition and keep their focus on improving consumer welfare rather than the welfare of individual firms.
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>>usage of Bing has more than doubled over the past three years
does it count every time I open a .pdf now I'm on bing for some unknown reason?
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Add an adobe extension to your browser, if you are not using edge.
If you are using edge, you are in bing because Microsoft owns you.
Switch to Chrome and let Google own you, instead.
(like the choice between republican and democrat, it is not the best of choices, but it is a choice)
gracias. pwn3d.
What's Bing?
It's kind of like a bong, but smaller.
Going from 2 users to 4 is doubling, so true.
B.I.N.G. But, It's Not Google.
Never been as good as Google but Google has destroyed its own usefully that Bing is actually catching up.
Bing was obviously more commercial driven in it's results but now so is Google.
Bing is sadly a better engine on political topics than Google.
Nah. Everyone's going there to have a laugh at triggering Sydney's insane existential crises.
Why is it that whenever anti-trust is brought up, nobody mentions Bell South's breakup?
Is it because that goes against Koch's interests?
Yeah, you can see the Koch interest in big business NEVER being challenged.
Reason knows who its masters are.
"Despite this long tradition, the Biden administration is bringing its first major tech antitrust case in U.S. v. Google and their approach will deemphasize the consumer welfare standard."
Google is a part of the Administration. If there is an antitrust case it's only because Google wants it.
And if it is successful, it is likely to make Google even more an arm of the state.
I think about Sears, K-Mart, AOL, Yahoo!, Netscape, Internet Explorer, and wonder why anyone thinks some company or technology will remain dominant forever.
When did Sears have a constantly revolving door with a political party and the IC while getting billions on contracts such as:
https://www.thestreet.com/investing/google-wins-seven-figure-dod-cloud-contract
How long did it take you to reel in that red herring?
No Sarcasmic, that's not a red herring. Not even remotely. I'm starting to think you do it on purpose.
"For decades the consumer welfare standard has been the primary basis on which antitrust enforcement decisions are made."
Where have you been the last few decades?
Yang and Yonk would make a great band name.
I don't think stopping a merger between Apple and Google is going to hurt consumers. But I do hope that's all this is about.
For a "libertarian" rag you certainly seem to argue against increased competition every.single.time.
Arguing against shielding Microsoft from competition is arguing against increased competition? Microsoft's not going out of business anytime soon. Microsoft can absorb and respond to increased competition from Google and Apple with increased competition of its own. Government action is decreasing competition.
You seem to be making the same mistake as anti-trust regulators who confuse preserving competitors and preserving competition. In competition you have winners and losers. Losers either up their game or get replaced. If you want to stay in the game, you figure out how to provide customers with products or services that are cheaper, better or both. Once regulators step in, this incentive is greatly weakened. Why put in the work to innovate when you can just lobby the government to kneecap your competition?
19 of the twenty richest billionaires in the US are Democrats. Alice Walton it he lone exception. Koch changed parties because he wasn’t getting his way in the Republican party. They all give big bucks to the Democrats campaigns. Of course Biden’s DOJ is going to put on a show of helping consumers while actually helping their Billionaire donors. The real question is are you stupid enough to believe their BS? Almost all regulation helps the big established companies and hurts the small and the start ups.
Crony Socialism alive and well in the Nazi-invaded US.
The CCP puts the USA's crony socialism to shame; but we're on our way.
This article, to the extent it discusses consumer choice, is completely unpersuasive.
The idea of making Google the default choice is so that consumers will use Google without actively choosing it.
The idea that such thoughtlessness can be justified based on consumer choice is itself thoughtless. When the Cass Sunstein wrote about default choices in Nudge, he observed that they were so powerful that they could be a reasonable alternative to regulation.
When Google pays huge amounts of money to Apple to deploy a concept that is so powerful that it is a reasonable alternative to regulation, we aren't really talking about consumer choice anymore. We are talking about consumers mostly forgetting that they even have a choice.
Unlike Sunstein, I don't assume people are stupid and lazy. "Default" isn't remotely the same as "exclusive". If you can show that the manufacturer makes it excessively difficult to change the defaults you might have a point, but in most cases it's trivially easy.
Microsoft Bing's usage has doubled over the last three years, but indicating that competition is still thriving and providing consumers with alternative choices in search engines. You know, I think the main purpose is development anyway. By the way, the development of different products takes a lot of time. When I needed to do that, I decided to use Microsoft office for Mac. This simplifies the management of various processes and project changes.