EDITORIAL
TIME TO TRUST BUST THE U.S. REACTIONS to the Sony Corporation's purchase
of Columbia Pictures ranged from fear to outrage to resignation; but all
of these responses viewed the sale primarily as yet another sign that Japan
is overshadowing the United States as a world economic power. If the Japanese
can buy Hollywood, the essence of American culture, little is sacred. All
but a very few missed a key issue in this deal: it was another corporate
merger in the communications industry. Now Sony not only produces audio
cassette tape, video cassette tape, video cassette recorders, television
sets and movie cameras, it also produces movies, videos and television
programs and owns movie theaters and movie channels. Thus, Sony's control
over film production extends from raw materials and equipment to creative
and marketing decisions. Sony can decide what is made, how it is made,
how and where it will be distributed and what it will cost the consumer.
By diversifying vertically within film, Sony has become dominant in the
film industry. Domination of this type is just as harmful to the industry,
the economy and the consumer as the more widely understood horizontal monopoly.
Having vertical control over a field allows companies to distort the market
in many ways. Columbia Pictures could make only movies which have a content
and style that further Sony's interests; the movies could be made with
Sony cameras and distributed through Columbia's movie theaters; when they
come out on video, they could be available on Sony's video cassettes; when
they show on cable television, they could be broadcast on Columbia's movie
channel. The parent company is able to make many decisions which affect
market choices and prices for consumers as well as for others in a particular
field. When Sony's video cassettes get the contract for Columbia's video
releases, smaller cassette manufacturers lose out and, perhaps, die out.
In this way, the vertical concentration spreads horizontally and dominant
companies continue to grow larger and more powerful. Corporate mergers
strengthen corporate control and power. When these mergers occur in the
communications industry, they strengthen corporate control over the flow
of ideas and culture. Such media mergers are on the rise. In the June 12,
1989 issue of The Nation, Ben H. Bagdikian, author of The Media Monopoly,
described the power that the few executives at the head of this empire
now have. He wrote: Together, they exert a homogenizing power over ideas,
culture and commerce that affects populations larger than any in history.
Neither Caesar nor Hitler, Franklin Roosevelt nor any Pope, has commanded
as much power to shape the information on which so many people depend to
make decisions about everything from whom to vote for to what to eat. In
1983, most of the country's broadcast and film business, newspaper, magazine
and book publishers were owned by 50 corporations; by 1987, only 29 companies
controlled the field; and the number is only expected to shrink in the
nineties. This kind of concentration is taking place in other industries
as well. It has increased in recent years in the United States in part
as a result of the failure of the Reagan/Bush administrations to enforce
antitrust laws and regulations. The Reagan administration loosened the
regulations in 1982 and 1984 and proposed relaxing anti-merger law radically.
Under Reagan, the staff of the Justice Department's Antitrust Division
was cut by more than a third. The Justice Department received 10,723 pre-merger
notifications between 1981 and 1987 and challenged only 26 of those deals.
By comparison, the challenge rate was 25 times higher in 1979, when the
Justice Department challenged 53 of the 861 pre-merger notifications filed.
Bush's new appointees to the Justice Department have announced that they
will be tougher on anti-trust enforcement, though Bush's strong ties to
big business and business's history of opposition to almost all forms of
anti-trust regulation may limit any new anti-trust initiatives. Even putting
such skepticism aside, former Federal Trade Commission officials point
out that Reagan's federal courts upheld the mergers of the eighties and
Bush's Justice Department may not be able to convince the federal judiciary
to reverse its position. Either way, it is important to recognize that
Bush's anti-trust regulators could do a great deal more than Reagan officials
did and still not adequately address the current monopoly madness. The
regulatory apparatus in this country was devastated by the Reagan presidency;
it must be strengthened and rebuilt through legislation and with increased
allocation of resources to the appropriate agencies.