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Antitrust : taking on monopoly power from the Gilded Age to the digital age / Amy Klobuchar.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Edition: First editionDescription: 607 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780525654896
  • 0525654895
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 343.7307/2109 23
LOC classification:
  • KF1649 .K58 2021
  • KF1649.K58 A58 2021
Contents:
Monopoly : it's not just a game : the roots of America's anti-monopolist movement -- Don't trust the trusts : James J. Hill, the Gilded Age, and the labor movement -- A heartland rebellion : the Grangers, a political prairie fire, and a Republican authors the Sherman Act -- Teddy Roosevelt and the antitrust enforcers : the trustbusters take over the White House -- The last one hundred years : a century of antitrust action (and inaction) in the courts and Congress -- We the people : why antitrust matters for our democracy and our economy -- Modern-day antitrust challenges : corporate consolidation, Congressional inertia, and the conservative courts -- The path forward : the solutions to America's monopoly problem.
Summary: "An exploration of antitrust laws and their enforcement, and of the importance of antitrust for the American people"-- Provided by publisher.Summary: "From the senior senator from Minnesota, former candidate for president of the United States, and chair of the U.S. Senate's Antitrust Subcommittee: an important, urgently needed book that shows how antitrust laws once saved the country from robber barons and oil tycoons and how, more than one hundred years later, in the era of Big Tech and unprecedented corporate consolidation, they can--and must--do it again. Amy Klobuchar tells the story of America's fight against monopolies and lays out a clear path forward to protect people from today's megamergers and monopoly pricing. From the Founding Fathers to the present, Antitrust recounts how our country's antimonopoly fervor led to the Boston Tea Party, the midwestern farmers' Granger movement, union organizing and the Haymarket Massacre and Pullman Strike, the rise of Teddy Roosevelt and William Jennings Bryan, and the muckraking investigative reporting that led to the dissolution of the Standard Oil Trust. In this timely, compelling history and call to action, Senator Klobuchar writes about the passage of the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts and the lower long-distance rates and cell phone innovations resulting from the breakup of AT&T. She describes how strong antitrust laws can foster new businesses and reduce discrimination and income inequality. She examines Big Pharma's price-gouging of medications from EpiPens to insulin and explores the immense power of tech giants Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google. Putting today's challenges in historical context, Senator Klobuchar makes clear the urgency of commonsense competition policy at this crucial moment in time when so many small businesses are struggling to survive. She argues for modernizing our country's laws, reinvigorating antitrust enforcement, and reforming America's policies to protect the middle class and the health of the U.S. economy. She discusses anticompetitive deals like AT&T-Time Warner, Facebook's acquisition of Instagram and WhatsApp, and T-Mobile's purchase of Sprint. She writes of media consolidation and how a marketplace with few players, or in which a single company dominates as an industry gatekeeper, hurts consumers and stifles innovation and entrepreneurship. Her book is a human, personal story as well. She tells of her own family--she's the granddaughter of an iron-ore miner on Minnesota's Iron Range, where railroad and steel industrialists built their empires. She writes of her battles against the insurance industry to guarantee new moms and their babies a minimum forty-eight-hour hospital stay, her fights in Congress to lower prescription drug prices, and taking on Big Tech companies to protect Americans from disinformation and anticompetitive conduct. With detailed suggestions for change in Washington, D.C., and at kitchen tables and workplaces throughout America, Antitrust is both a warning and a guide to the clear and present dangers posed by today's monopolies. This important and revelatory book shows why antitrust mattered a century ago and why it matters today--for our economy, for our democracy, for our well-being"-- From the dust jacket.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
BOOK BOOK Harrison Memorial Library NONFICTION Adult Nonfiction 343.73 KLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31624004548806
Total holds: 0

"This is a Borzoi book"-- title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 361-566) and index.

Monopoly : it's not just a game : the roots of America's anti-monopolist movement -- Don't trust the trusts : James J. Hill, the Gilded Age, and the labor movement -- A heartland rebellion : the Grangers, a political prairie fire, and a Republican authors the Sherman Act -- Teddy Roosevelt and the antitrust enforcers : the trustbusters take over the White House -- The last one hundred years : a century of antitrust action (and inaction) in the courts and Congress -- We the people : why antitrust matters for our democracy and our economy -- Modern-day antitrust challenges : corporate consolidation, Congressional inertia, and the conservative courts -- The path forward : the solutions to America's monopoly problem.

"An exploration of antitrust laws and their enforcement, and of the importance of antitrust for the American people"-- Provided by publisher.

"From the senior senator from Minnesota, former candidate for president of the United States, and chair of the U.S. Senate's Antitrust Subcommittee: an important, urgently needed book that shows how antitrust laws once saved the country from robber barons and oil tycoons and how, more than one hundred years later, in the era of Big Tech and unprecedented corporate consolidation, they can--and must--do it again. Amy Klobuchar tells the story of America's fight against monopolies and lays out a clear path forward to protect people from today's megamergers and monopoly pricing. From the Founding Fathers to the present, Antitrust recounts how our country's antimonopoly fervor led to the Boston Tea Party, the midwestern farmers' Granger movement, union organizing and the Haymarket Massacre and Pullman Strike, the rise of Teddy Roosevelt and William Jennings Bryan, and the muckraking investigative reporting that led to the dissolution of the Standard Oil Trust. In this timely, compelling history and call to action, Senator Klobuchar writes about the passage of the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts and the lower long-distance rates and cell phone innovations resulting from the breakup of AT&T. She describes how strong antitrust laws can foster new businesses and reduce discrimination and income inequality. She examines Big Pharma's price-gouging of medications from EpiPens to insulin and explores the immense power of tech giants Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google. Putting today's challenges in historical context, Senator Klobuchar makes clear the urgency of commonsense competition policy at this crucial moment in time when so many small businesses are struggling to survive. She argues for modernizing our country's laws, reinvigorating antitrust enforcement, and reforming America's policies to protect the middle class and the health of the U.S. economy. She discusses anticompetitive deals like AT&T-Time Warner, Facebook's acquisition of Instagram and WhatsApp, and T-Mobile's purchase of Sprint. She writes of media consolidation and how a marketplace with few players, or in which a single company dominates as an industry gatekeeper, hurts consumers and stifles innovation and entrepreneurship. Her book is a human, personal story as well. She tells of her own family--she's the granddaughter of an iron-ore miner on Minnesota's Iron Range, where railroad and steel industrialists built their empires. She writes of her battles against the insurance industry to guarantee new moms and their babies a minimum forty-eight-hour hospital stay, her fights in Congress to lower prescription drug prices, and taking on Big Tech companies to protect Americans from disinformation and anticompetitive conduct. With detailed suggestions for change in Washington, D.C., and at kitchen tables and workplaces throughout America, Antitrust is both a warning and a guide to the clear and present dangers posed by today's monopolies. This important and revelatory book shows why antitrust mattered a century ago and why it matters today--for our economy, for our democracy, for our well-being"-- From the dust jacket.

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