US experts call Intel verdict protectionist

EU antitrust decision gets a bashing from US
EU antitrust decision gets a bashing from US

American technology advocates and legal experts have roundly condemned the EU's decision to fine Intel nearly a billion pounds for breaking anti-trust laws.

Grant Aldonas, Senior Advisor at the bipartisan Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), says, "This is a potentially costly ruling for both the United States and Europe. It could lead to higher computer prices, which will hinder investment in information technology, making both economic recovery and improvements in our long-term competitiveness more difficult."

He went on to say, "I can't help but wonder whether the EU's singling out of an American company for this sort of fine isn't protectionism by another name, with the fine replacing the more conventional means of protection, like tariffs, that the WTO now enjoins."

Trade war ahead?

Professor Keith Hylton of Boston University agrees: ""The EC decision to impose the largest fine in its history on Intel sends a worrisome signal to dominant firms in the US. Punishing large firms for cutting prices provides a strong incentive for those firms to avoid price competition, and this hurts consumers in the long run."

Ronald Cass, Chairman of the Centre for the Rule of Law chimes in with, "The EC's use of huge fines against market-leading firms - fines calculated from a firm's world-wide sales, not from harm to European consumers - discourages aggressive competition that benefits consumers. Consumer harm should be the concern for competition law, and here instead consumers saw sharp declines in cost and increases in product quality. Even Intel's complaining rival, AMD, enjoyed historic success during the period it claims Intel's actions foreclosed competition."

Jonathan Zuck, President of the industry advocacy group the Association for Competitive Technology notes, "For the past 20 years, the microprocessor industry has delivered more innovation, more speed, more functionality, and lower prices. Over the past ten years, the average price of Intel's PC microprocessors has dropped by 60 per cent. When the only one complaining about the competitive situation is AMD, it raises serious concerns about the efficacy of this action."

Announcing Intel's intention to appeal the decision and denying that Intel ever sell products below cost, president and CEO Paul Otellini said today, "We do not believe our practices violated European law. There has been absolutely zero harm to consumers."

AMD, predictably, sees things differently: "Today's ruling is an important step toward establishing a truly competitive market," said Dirk Meyer, AMD president and CEO. "AMD has consistently been a technology innovation leader and we are looking forward to the move from a world in which Intel ruled, to one which is ruled by customers."

TOPICS
Latest in CPU
AMD Ryzen 9000 3D chips
AMD officially announces price and release date for Ryzen 9 9900X3D and 9950X3D processors
A chip wafer manufactured at Intel Foundry
Can 18A save Intel from being devoured by its rivals – and Wall Street?
A stock photo of a man saying 'no thank you' to a gift box bearing the AMD Ryzen logo.
I'm tired of waiting for AMD's entry-level Ryzen 9000 series chips
Water cooling acrylic tube system with Barrow cpu block
What is a normal temperature for a CPU?
Render of AMD Ryzen chip
AMD’s powerful Ryzen 9 9950X3D and 9900X3D CPUs rumored to arrive on March 12 – but gamers will still be better off with the 9800X3D
AMD
One Redditor spotted an AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D for $99 in the wildest price drop I've ever seen
Latest in News
A collage of Ellie and Joel in The Last of Us season 2
The Last of Us season 2's new trailer teases a huge showdown between Bella Ramsey's Ellie and Pedro Pascal's Joel, but the big moment I'm waiting for is still being held back
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max REVIEW
New iPhone 17 Air leak may have revealed some key specs – and how it compares to the iPhone 17 Pro Max
Gaming with AI
I asked Gemini to play a text-based adventure game with me and the AI whisked me away to a word-based fantasy
Apple iPhone 16 Review
Three iPhone 17 model dummy units appear in a hands-on video leak
The Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge on display the January 22, 2025 Galaxy Unpacked event.
New Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge may have revealed some key details – including its price
Quordle on a smartphone held in a hand
Quordle hints and answers for Monday, March 10 (game #1141)