The Not So Good, Very Bad and Really Weird Merger of T-Mobile and Sprint

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For those of you unfamiliar with the merger, 17 months ago, in April 2018, T-Mobile and Sprint announced that they would merge in a deal valued at around $26 billion dollars and sought permission from the Justice Department to do so. You might think that with clear evidence of price increases and other consumer and competitive harms, and before a Justice Department that had sued to block the vertical merger of AT&T and Time Warner, and whose Antitrust Chief, Makan Delrahim, had made it abundantly clear multiple times that behavioral remedies were inadequate to resolve competitive harms, this 4-3 merger would have been blocked a long time ago. But you would be wrong. Instead, we’ve witnessed one of the worst and weirdest cases of industrial policymaking I’ve ever seen in any Administration, Democratic or Republican.  


The Not So Good, Very Bad and Really Weird Merger of T-Mobile and Sprint