I’ve started reading Bryan Caplan’s excellent new book entitled Pro-Market and Pro-Business: Essays on Laissez-faire, and have covered the first 12 (short) chapters. I had hoped to find lots of things to post about, but unfortunately I tend to agree with almost all of Bryan’s arguments. There is one chapter on antitrust, however, which I found a bit unsatisfying. Although even in that case I probably agree with the policy implications of his argument:
Since 2007, Bill Gates has given away $28B, 48% of his net worth. Frugal Dad estimates that he’s saved almost 6 million lives. I haven’t double-checked his sources, but it’s a plausible estimate.
Back in the nineties, Bill Gates was experiencing far less favorable publicity – and legal persecution. The U.S. government sued Microsoft for antitrust violations. In 2000, Alex Tabarrok estimated that the antitrust case had cost Microsoft shareholders $140B. Yes, Microsoft ultimately reached a relatively favorable settlement. But Gates probably would have been billions richer if antitrust laws didn’t exist. . . .
If Gates’ philanthropy is as efficacious as most people think, there’s a shocking implication: The antitrust case against Microsoft had a massive body count. Gates saves about one life for every $5000 he spends. If the case cost him $5B, and he would have given away 48%, antitrust killed 480,000 people. If the case cost him $5B, and he would have given away every penny, antitrust killed a million people. Imagine how many people would be dead today if the government managed to bring Microsoft to its knees, and Gates to bankruptcy. It staggers the imagination.
I’ve made a similar argument about Bill Gates when speaking with people, but I think this goes a bit too far:
You might object, “By the standard, Gates himself is killing millions by failing to give even more.” If you’re a consequentialist, that’s exactly correctly; we’re all murderers in the eyes of Jeremy Bentham and Peter Singer. But if we stick to the common sense distinction between “killing” and “letting die,” Gates is innocent, and the government remains guilty.
I don’t find any of that to be a common sense interpretation. I am a consequentialist, and I don’t believe that refraining from charity is murder. Nor I do believe that a “common sense distinction” would find the US government guilty of killing in this case.

Antitrust involves both efficiency and equity issues. I am skeptical as to whether the US government’s antitrust case against Microsoft made the economy more efficient, and I suspect Bryan is also skeptical. As a result, our policy views would likely end up in roughly the same place. But Bryan’s post implicitly focused on the impact of redistribution, not efficiency, so that’s where I’d like to address my comments.
The logic of this chapter suggests that income redistribution from the rich to the middle class is bad on utilitarian grounds, because the rich have a much higher propensity to help the poorest people in the world. In the case of Bill Gates, that is probably true. But public policies should not be constructed on how they would impact a single individual; rather we need to consider the overall effect of any policy of redistribution. Many rich people spend their wealth on consumption, and/or donate to causes such as wealthy universities and woke foundations.
Antitrust is a weird example to use when addressing these sorts of issues. Instead, it makes much more sense to think about the optimal design of tax and transfer programs when making consequentialist arguments based on the assumption that transferring billions of dollars to billionaires would help the poorest people in the world.
If Bill Gates were typical, then it might be optimal to sharply raise taxes on middle class and upper middle class Americans, and sharply cut taxes on billionaires. But in that case an even better policy would be a sharply progressive consumption tax regime, with the revenue going to exactly the sort of foreign aid programs that were recently slashed by the DOGE people. You might argue that this redirecting money to poor countries is politically unrealistic, as most voters believe that charity begins at home. That’s true, but it is also true that a policy of sharply higher taxes on the middle class is not particularly popular.
So what is politically feasible? One answer is that whatever comes out of Congress this year is the only politically feasible tax policy at the moment. I view that sort of reasoning as excessively defeatist. A highly progressive consumption tax on the wealthy is not an easy sell in Congress, but surely it’s less unpopular than adopting a highly regressive income tax regime. With a highly progressive consumption tax regime, Bill Gates is not in any way discouraged from trying to help the world’s poorest people. And yet this plan does not require us to worry about the welfare of billionaires when thinking about optimal tax policy and optimal antitrust policy.
Again, I’m not certain that Bryan disagrees with these policy views. But in a world where many people actually are consequentialist, I worry that it’s needlessly provocative to suggest that the world might be better off if our richest billionaires were even richer. You can get to the same place with a steeply progressive consumption tax, without turning off potential fans of free markets and big business.
As far as antitrust, I’d prefer it focus exclusively on efficiency issues (which means mostly attacking government barriers to entry), and leave questions of redistribution up to our tax and transfer system. If the Microsoft case was counterproductive, it was because it made our economy less efficient.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Jul 4 2025 at 4:09pm
Bottom line people really can’t be sure about the alternate universe where Microsoft does not effectively prevail against Netscape (if memory serves Netscape won a token dollar). Microsoft didn’t bundle Windows with IE because they were worried about Netscape’s browser, what they were worried about was an existential threat to Windows itself. For all we know the owners/shareholders of Netscape may have proven even more charitable, indeed there are other consequences as to whether others were discouraged from developing an EXCEL or WORD competitors because after all Windows could just bundle those products as well. We’ll never know.
Robert EV
Jul 4 2025 at 6:30pm
One of the co-founders of Netscape was Marc Andreessen, so probably not given his record.
Alan Goldhammer
Jul 4 2025 at 5:14pm
There were competing products at the time.Word Perfect was the dominant word processing program under DOS and Lotus 1-2-3 was the dominant spreadsheet program. Canadian company Corel bought Word Perfect and IBM bought Lotus. Neither effectively negotiated a path towards migrating to Windows. Let’s also not forget that the Mozilla Foundation that maintains web browser Firefox remains reliant on payments from Google to stay afloat. There continue to be a lot of web browsers out there and one can find substitutes for Microsoft Office that are free today. However, the corporate world pretty much settled on Microsoft programs primarily because they were well supported. I continue to use Microsoft Office in retirement for daily work chores (I chair a non-profit foundation).
Disclosure: I’ve been a Microsoft shareholder for 35 years.
Robert EV
Jul 4 2025 at 6:31pm
I’m under the impression that antitrust enforcement in the 70s/80s is why IBM turned to Microsoft in the first place for an operating system, and possibly why it allowed a licensing scheme instead of a total buyout. So anti-trust enforcement is, in fact, responsible for all of the lives saved by Gates’s billions.
A year after AT&T’s forced breakup the value of the baby bell stocks was up 1/6th compared to the pre-breakup company. This at a time when the DJIA was up less than 10%, though the S&P500 was doing a bit better. So maybe the problem wasn’t the antitrust suit, but its failure to break up Microsoft.
Rajat
Jul 5 2025 at 10:50pm
I agree with your comments on Bryan’s approach, Scott. As an antitrust economist, I would say that antitrust law is orientated around (allocative) efficiency, not redistribution, although lower prices and higher output normally have progressive distributional implications. Of course, one take issue with the way the law is pursued by various administrations and DoJ/FTC leaderships, and some cases are more speculative than others. But even under the Biden DoJ & FTC, the cases the agencies actually ran were almost all focussed on (and certainly those cases they won, were on) traditional pro-efficiency goals. The 1990s Microsoft case was also about efficiency: Stopping Microsoft from leveraging its market power in one product (operating systems) into another (browsers) and from foreclosing web-based competitors to its operating system. That’s not to say the case was ironclad, but it was justifiable to take on pro-efficiency grounds. And importantly, the case was not about stopping Microsoft from getting bigger or Bill Gates from getting richer. As for the costs of the litigation, that is just what litigation costs, and tricky cases (especially in the US legal system) will often be time-consuming and expensive. That is one reason why various governments have introduced (and the Biden administration was hoping to), ex ante regulation of digital platforms. Again, one can argue about the merits of that, but there are real economic efficiency issues there to be considered. Sometimes, I feel that Bryan does his good work in areas like education a disservice by taking an overly simplistic and glib approach to areas he knows less well. Tyler the same, frankly.
Thomas L Hutcheson
Jul 6 2025 at 1:57pm
and leave questions of redistribution up to our tax and transfer system
I agree. I just wish it were more focused on transferring consumption down instead of up as massive tax cuts mainly for the high income folks
Knut P. Heen
Jul 7 2025 at 5:52am
Interesting, I remember Ludwig von Mises making exactly the opposite argument in one of his books. His argument was that western medicine increased the population in developing countries to such an extent that lack of food and clean water became a problem instead.
By the way, if anyone wants to learn a shocking story about natural selection, they should read about the connection between malaria and the sickle cell trait.
Todd Ramsey
Jul 8 2025 at 9:39am
1. (Partially off-topic) Often overlooked are the QALYs Bill Gates saves through the productivity tools of Excel, Word, a standardized operating system, and other innovations, which massively exceed 480,000.
2. (Completely off-topic) Scott, have you listened to or read the transcript of Tyler’s conversation with Austan Goolsbee? Would love to hear your comments. He seems so ignorant it’s scary that he is head of Chicago Fed.
He doesn’t seem to know that some stablecoins are backed by Treasuries. He “doesn’t like making policy through accounting identities”, but just bloviates when Tyler presses him on what he does want. He doesn’t seem to know the possibilities of AI to help the Fed with regulation.
And he sounds just like Bryan Cranston.
Robert EV
Jul 9 2025 at 4:42pm
I would say it’s human nature to develop these tools and mass adopt one, or a handful of them, for their network effects. If Microsoft hadn’t done it there were competitors out there doing it. So on the QALY front this is a wash, plus or minus whatever specific input Gates may have had on making things seemless.
What people don’t do by nature is add doodads that they aren’t interested in, and remove those that they are accustomed to. So a question is how many QALYs are lost due to manadatory UI ‘upgrades’?
Todd Ramsey
Jul 12 2025 at 9:20am
“So on the QALY front this is a wash, plus or minus whatever specific input Gates may have had on making things seemless”.
At a minimum, the QALYs saved by Microsoft standardizing operating systems and doing productivity upgrades BEFORE anyone else were massive, and probably still outweigh anything his foundation has done. And to your second point, it’s possible or likely the competitors would have had the same amount of stupid UI “upgrades”; you can’t assume Microsoft is worse than a competitor would have been.
Although I suppose you could add the QALYs of the descendants of people who would otherwise have died from smallpox or malaria to the foundation total.
Robert EV
Jul 9 2025 at 4:46pm
Forgot to mention: Backed by, but not convertible to. The terms of services for Tether, I believe, allows them to deny cashing out stablecoins for dollars. Or at least it did a couple years ago. And even then they’ll only cash out for certain individuals organizations, and then a minimum of $100k.
Todd Ramsey
Jul 12 2025 at 9:11am
Apart from Tether, which has earmarks of a scam, some other stablecoins are fully backed by Treasuries, with auditing, and are fully convertible to dollars at the request of the stablecoin holder.
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