Follow along live with the Stigler Center’s 2025 Antitrust and Competition Conference focused on Economic Concentration and the Marketplace of Ideas.

The conference takes place on April 10th and 11th in Chicago.

Day Two Livestream

Day One Livestream

Agenda

April 10, 2025
8:15 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast
8:30 AM – 8:40 AMWelcome Remarks | Madhav Rajan, University of Chicago
8:40 AM – 8:45 AMOpening Remarks | Guy Rolnik, University of Chicago
8:45 AM – 10:05 AMMedia Concentration, Ownership, and Regulation

Scholars and experts have been concerned about media ownership since the invention of the press. This panel traces the historical development of trends in 19th and 20th-century media ownership with special attention to the role of technological development and market concentration. It begins with discussions on concentration at the infrastructure level, covers Hutchins Commission Report, talks about the shaping of the information ecosystem in post-WWII Europe and works forward to the present to provide a historical foundation for the conference discussions.

Moderator: Sarah EllisonThe Washington Post

Stephen Bates , University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Alexandra Geese, European Parliament
Richard John , Columbia University
Paul Starr, Princeton University
10:05 AM – 10:30 AMBreak
10:30 AM – 11:30 AMMusk, China, Economic Power, and Influence Across Borders

In 2019, China flexed its market power to silence foreign corporate support for Hong Kong’s protests by threatening the loss of access to China’s domestic market. More recently, Elon Musk has undertaken to extend his political influence beyond the United States to intervene in European politics. These are just a few examples of how economic power can be leveraged to project international influence over the global marketplace of ideas. This panel discusses the causal mechanisms and practical implications of such geopolitical influence campaigns. 

Moderator: Jesse EisingerProPublica

Barry Lynn, Open Markets Institute
Guy Rolnik, University of Chicago
Audrye Wong, University of Southern California
11:30 AM – 12:00 PMBreak
12:00 PM – 1:00 PMLunch | Keynote

Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago
1:00 PM – 1:30 PMBreak
1:30 PM – 2:30 PMThe Digital Services Act: One Year Later
The European Digital Services Act (DSA) is the world’s foremost regulation for online content moderation. This panel assesses the DSA’s current track record over its first year of existence, whether the DSA’s stated goals make sense, and what is needed for the regulation to accomplish its aims.

Moderator: Florence G’sell, Stanford University

Alissa Cooper, Knight-Georgetown Institute  
Daphne Keller, Stanford University
Joris van Hoboken, University of Amsterdam
2:30 PM – 3:00 PMBreak
3:00 PM – 4:00 PMHow Algorithms and AI are Reshaping Democracy and our Information Ecosystem

It is now common knowledge that the digital public sphere is governed by algorithms that determine whose voices are amplified and whose are neglected. This panel takes a look “under the hood” of the algorithms that structure the digital public sphere to explore the technical mechanisms governing contemporary online discourses and how agents can explore them to their advantage. Mechanisms of interest here include prompt re-engineering, generative AI in search engines, data biases, and algorithmic manipulation by fine-tuning.   

Moderator: Julia AngwinThe New York Times

Laura Edelson, Northeastern University
Paul Ohm, Georgetown University
Joshua Tucker, New York University
4:00 PM – 4:20 PMBreak
4:20 PM – 5:20 PMCan Policy Changes Safeguard the Marketplace of Ideas?

Given a contemporary landscape characterized by increasingly concentrated economic power and potent digital tools for structuring public discussions, how can we protect the free generation and circulation of ideas? This panel discusses the ideal role of policy in the nurturing of our modern information ecosystem. For some scholars, this would be through more intervention; for others, through safe harbors and protections (and everything in between). 

Moderator: David DayenThe American Prospect

Martin Gurri, Mercatus Center
Andrey Mir, York University
Madhavi Singh, Yale University
5:20 PM – 5:40 PMBreak
5:40 PM – 6:40 PMSocial Media and Democracy Beyond the US/EU

In the early 2010s, a common narrative held that the Arab Spring demonstrated the democratizing power of social media to equip the public to liberate themselves from authoritarian regimes. Fast forward to the present, and social media platforms have become potent weapons for politics and social control deployed by democratic states and authoritarian regimes alike. This panel explores case studies from Brazil, Israel, and Turkey to understand the dynamics between social media use and politics beyond the US and the EU.   

Moderator: Judith Pintow, Brandeis Institute

Ido Baum, Brandeis Institute
Caio Mario S. Pereira Neto, FGV São Paulo Law School
Afsin Yurdakul, Freelance Journalist
6:40 PM – 7:30 PMReception
7:30 PM – 8:30 PMDinner | Keynote

Andrew Ferguson, Chairman, U.S. Federal Trade Commission

In conversation with: Eric Posner, University of Chicago
April 11, 2025
8:00 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast
8:30 AM – 9:30 AMFraming Panel: Monopolies, Democracies, and the Information Ecosystem

One simple summation of democracy is the ideal that every citizen ought to have an equal voice, both in influencing collective decisions and contributing to the public sphere. That ideal can never be fully realized, yet it appears especially threatened by contemporary concentrations of economic power that structure both the production and circulation of ideas. This panel frames the coming panel discussions through the lens of the conflicts between that democratic ideal and its interaction with economic power. 

Moderator: Brody Mullins, Investigative journalist

Tim Wu, Columbia University
Luigi Zingales, University of Chicago
9:30 AM – 9:45 AMBreak
9:45 AM – 10:45 AMDoes Economic Concentration Impact Academic Independence?

Contemporary science is characterized by its dependence on external support. Historically, this support has been financial, as everything from large particle colliders to social surveys require funding support from public agencies or private parties. Increasingly, this support comes through access to otherwise inaccessible datasets. This panel explores the challenges of maintaining academic independence when scholars are frequently dependent on external partnerships to execute their research agendas. 

Moderator: Anat Admati, Stanford University

Stephen Haber, Stanford University
William Kovacic, George Washington University
Tommaso Valletti, Imperial College London
10:45 AM – 10:55 AMBreak
10:55 AM – 11:30 AMFireside Chat

Roger Alford, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice
Doha Mekki, University of California Berkeley 

In conversation with: Josh SiscoBloomberg
11:30 AM – 11:35 AMBreak
11:35 AM – 12:35 PMAntitrust and the 1st Amendment

In 2024, Elon Musk filed an antitrust lawsuit against a nonprofit coalition of major advertisers for allegedly illegally coordinating to boycott Twitter/X. At the same time, many have accused social media companies of using their market power to silence voices they disagree with. These and other dynamics are bringing the 1st Amendment and antitrust policy ever closer together. This panel discusses what are the limits of this interaction and what changes, if any, are needed to antitrust policy to better tackle freedom of speech concerns.

Moderator: Maciej Bernatt, University of Warsaw

Greg Day, University of Georgia
Eleanor Fox, New York University
Matt Stoller, American Economic Liberties Project
12:35 PM – 12:55 PMBreak
12:55 PM – 1:55 PMLunch | Keynote

John Ioannidis, Stanford University

In conversation with: Stefano Feltri, Bocconi University
1:55 PM – 2:10 PMBreak
2:10 PM – 3:30 PMRevisiting the Stigler Center Subcommittee on Politics Report

In 2019, the Stigler Center’s Committee on Digital Platform Subcommittee on Politics report concluded that digital platforms possessed an exceptional collection of advantages that enabled them to influence politics, regulation, and the public discourse more broadly. In particular, these big tech firms benefitted from concentrations of economic power, command over the digital public sphere, the protections of Section 230 and the 1st amendment, their large membership power, expertise in opaque technologies, and their ability to channel national champions’ sentiments when engaging in lobbying campaigns. This panel picks this conversation back up to explore how the report’s conclusions have held up and the many advantages that have afforded big tech the power to structure the public sphere. 

Moderator: Rana ForooharFinancial Times

Cristina Caffarra, CEPR – University College London
Nolan McCarty, Princeton University
Nicolas Petit, European University Institute
Randy Picker, University of Chicago
3:30 PM – 3:50 PMBreak
3:50 PM – 4:50 PMCompetition Advocacy: Past & Present

This panel explores the landscape of competition advocacy in the U.S. and the EU, examining various strategies employed by civil society and corporate actors to shape antitrust policy, and how those strategies are evolving. Advocacy strategies of interest include how the Chamber of Commerce approaches lobbying, how think tanks strategically generate research to influence regulatory rulemaking, networks of competition scholars, and what lessons can be drawn from the EU’s track record with regulatory approaches. Underlying those advocacy strategies is the resource imbalance and influence between civil society and corporate interests. Ultimately, the panel asks: if current models are falling short, where do we go from here in building more effective forms of competition advocacy?

Moderator: Matthew Lucky, University of Chicago

Marianne Bertrand, University of Chicago
Sean Heather, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Michelle Meagher, University College London
4:50 PM – 4:55 PMClosing Remarks | Luigi Zingales, University of Chicago
5:00 PMConference Adjourns