Let Foreign Airlines Serve Domestic Routes in the U.S.
Argentina is opening domestic air travel to foreign airlines for the first time. The same trick has worked wonders for Europe.
Argentina is opening domestic air travel to foreign airlines for the first time. The same trick has worked wonders for Europe.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
Should a federal government that is nearly $34 trillion in debt and can't manage basic operations be micromanaging fast-food business purchases?
Plus: Send your questions for the editors to roundtable@reason.com ahead of this week’s special webathon episode!
The owner of Jimmy John's and Arby's has bought Subway, and a Massachusetts senator has concerns.
Lina Khan says this number is crucial to understanding Amazon's monopoly power, but she's either confused or lying about what it means.
The pop singer's new concert film inadvertently makes the case for big businesses with sweeping market power.
The worst of the antitrust alarmism keeps proving untrue, as tech companies believed by some to be monopolies instead lose market share.
The Department of Justice undervalues consumer preference in its latest antitrust efforts.
An undercurrent of the book is that common people want whatever progressive intellectuals want them to want.
The worst of the antitrust alarmism keeps proving untrue, as tech companies believed by some to be monopolies instead lose market share.
An undercurrent of the book is that common people want whatever progressive intellectuals want them to want.
Plus: FDA approves new COVID-19 vaccine, Elizabeth Warren goes after Elon Musk, and more...
X-Dumpsters owner Steven Hedrick rents roll-away dumpsters to people, but now his city forces residents to contract with the county.
For an economics lesson, Nina Turner should try out Catan.
The gaming market remains competitive with a wide variety of options.
Many politicians offer a simplified view of the world—one in which government interventions are all benefits and no costs. That couldn't be further from the truth.
Plus: Was Gerald Ford right to pardon Richard Nixon?
Certificate of need laws hurt consumers by decreasing the supply of services, raising prices, and lowering service quality.
If the FTC wants to know why there's such a notable lack of competition within America's baby formula market, it ought to ask other parts of the federal bureaucracy.
The ideology champions the same tired policies that big government types predictably propose whenever they see something they don't like.
Steven Hedrick rents out roll-off dumpsters to people and hauls them away after. A new city ordinance is mandating that people use county services instead.
Federal A.I. regulation now will hinder progress, consumer choice, and market competition.
Plus: "No such thing" as a "harmless drag show" says university president, aggressive code enforcement in Florida, and more...
The legislation, which forbids shipping anything between American ports in ships that are not U.S. built and crewed, is just another a special deal that one industry has scammed out of Congress.
Chair Lina Khan has flouted the rule of law and due process, Commissioner Christine Wilson wrote.
The FTC is trying to seize new powers to regulate the economy.
Plus: Trump teases new avenues of authoritarianism, interest rates raised again, and more...
The site crashed because Swift is very popular, not because antitrust enforcement is too weak.
Plus: Journalism versus qualified immunity, Mississippi bill would end civil asset forfeiture, and more...
Deregulated states may spend more on transmission, but that part of the market is still heavily regulated.
It’s one of the most competitive industries in the world, and there’s no good reason to stop Microsoft from acquiring Activision Blizzard.
Mastodon might not be the future of decentralized social media, but it can’t hurt to check it out as Twitter implodes.
Critics have said for years that Facebook is a monopoly that can only be killed by federal regulation. Meanwhile, the platform bleeds users, its stock price is plummeting, and it just announced its first-ever round of layoffs.
Plus: A rebranded "Build Back Better," the two-party system creates "a disconnect between elites and non-elites," and more...
Protectionist policies stymie trade and make Americans poorer.
The alcohol sector has seen more than 6,000 new entrants, but the Treasury still thinks it has an antitrust problem.
The idea would benefit central planners and grow the ranks of bureaucrats while making the poor even poorer.
Those who demand a revival of antitrust regulation to "promote competition" may not realize that they're inciting a revival of cronyism to suppress competition.
Legislators on a crusade against monopolies should tackle occupational licensing boards before they target Big Tech.
Plus: Warren versus grocery stores, Cruz versus the FBI, DOJ's new domestic terror unit, why so many people are quitting their jobs, and more...
Children are too important to be entrusted to unions or government monopolies.
Amazon promotes products that mimic its competition? Welcome to more than a century of American retail practices.
"Maybe one billionaire with a penchant for destroying democracies shouldn’t be allowed to own so much of the internet," says the representative from New York.
Friday A/V Club: Some people are against concentrated media power. Some just want to bend it to their will.
A member of the board (and a Cato Institute vice president) defends the controversial decision to kick the former president off the social media platform.