Market power wielded by US tech giants concerns IMF chief

Christine Lagarde feels ‘too much concentration in hands of the few’ does not help economy

The head of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, has expressed concern about the market power wielded by the US technology giants and called for more competition to protect economies and individuals.

Speaking at a press conference to mark the start of the IMF’s spring meeting in Washington, Lagarde said breaking up companies was not the solution, but added that her organisation was monitoring their impact on prosperity, financial stability and the workplace.

“Competition is needed. From competition you get productivity growth and innovation. Too much concentration, too much market power in the hands of the few is not helpful to the economy or to the wellbeing of individuals.”

Pressure has been building in the US for antitrust laws to be used to break up some of the biggest companies, with Google, Facebook and Amazon all targeted by critics.

Lagarde said: “I am not sure breaking up some of the tech titans in this country [the US] or in other countries will be the right answer. It used to be the right answer, but when most of the assets are intangible, how do you break them up? How do you facilitate access and allow market disruptors to operate? I think that is where a lot of new thinking has to be done.”

The IMF is carefully monitoring new digital currencies such as Bitcoin, which it says are prone to fraud and can be used for money laundering. “We have seen a flourishing of cryptocurrencies. There are now more than 100. That has stability implications eventually. We do not think it is systemic at this point in time but regulators and supervisors have to be watchful.”

Lagarde expressed concern at the growing threat of a trade war between the US and China, saying that protectionism posed a threat to the upswing in the global economy and to an international system that had served countries well.

She said the actual impact of the proposed US and Chinese tariffs would be small. “It is more difficult to measure the erosion of confidence. When investors don’t know the terms on which they are trading, they are reluctant to invest. Growth is being driven by more investment and trade, so why damage those engines?”

Britain is one developed country that has not seen its growth prospects upgraded by the IMF over the past year. The Washington-based organisation expects growth of around 1.5% this year and next.

Although the UK economy has performed better than the IMF expected prior to the EU referendum in June 2016, Lagarde said there had been a negative impact from Brexit. “The cloud of uncertainty that covers the British economy is one reason the UK is not enjoying the same upswing as other advanced countries. Hopefully it will clear up as time goes by.”

Lagarde said the UK needed to sort out its new trading arrangements with the European Union and 150 countries around the world. “Once that has been settled, once the cloud has been dissipated, hopefully Britain will be in a better position to benefit from the upswing.”

Contributor

Larry Elliott

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Is it time to break up the tech giants such as Facebook? | Larry Elliott
Amazon, Facebook and Google are as dominant as Standard Oil and AT&T were. But breaking them up is not going to be easy

Larry Elliott

25, Mar, 2018 @12:14 PM

Article image
IMF chief joins calls for big tech firms to pay more tax
Christine Lagarde says governments must address corporation taxation concerns

Phillip Inman

25, Mar, 2019 @6:45 PM

Article image
IMF says governments could set up their own cryptocurrencies
Christine Lagarde praises rebel technology as ‘safe, cheap, and potentially semi-anonymous’

Phillip Inman

14, Nov, 2018 @1:30 AM

Article image
'Fight fire with fire': IMF's Lagarde calls for bitcoin crackdown
IMF chief says cryptocurrency’s own blockchain technology could be used to control it

Richard Partington

13, Mar, 2018 @1:00 PM

Article image
Is big tech now just too big to stomach?
The Covid crisis has turbo-charged profits and share prices. But are the big six now too powerful for regulators to ignore?

Jasper Jolly

06, Feb, 2021 @8:00 AM

Article image
MPs launch inquiry into digital currencies amid cybercrime fears
Scrutiny is needed to examine risks for investors, says Treasury committee chair Nicky Morgan

Rupert Neate

22, Feb, 2018 @6:01 AM

Article image
Tech giants power record surge in renewable energy sales
Amount of clean energy bought by companies triples in two years, with Google biggest buyer

Jillian Ambrose

28, Jan, 2020 @2:03 PM

Article image
France poised to drop plan to tax tech giants amid signs of US deal
Talks in Davos raise hope of agreement to find multilateral solution to taxing digital firms

Larry Elliott in Davos

21, Jan, 2020 @7:23 PM

Article image
Apple leads race to become world's first $1tn company
Tech giants likely to pass record valuation if share price rises echo 2017 performance with Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Facebook in with a chance

Rupert Neate Wealth correspondent

03, Jan, 2018 @6:00 AM

Article image
G7 plan will slash UK tax revenue from US tech firms, say experts
Global changes could mean Treasury loses £230m from Google, Amazon, Facebook and eBay

Richard Partington Economics correspondent

08, Jun, 2021 @3:04 PM