The "hipster antitrust" movement emerged in 2017 as young lawyer Lina Khan and others argued that competition law should embrace a wider variety of harms and benefits than the price-focussed consumer welfare standard. The pushback was firm - including from ACCC boss Rod Sims - and hipster antitrust was consigned by many to the recycling crate of history. Fast forward to 2021 - Lina Khan leads the FTC and antitrust hipsters are quickly becoming mainstream. Betty Mkatshwa joins us to discuss how we got here and where we're going. Plus: criminal cartels that make you sick, rigged roofing allegations, and what Don Bradman's batting average has in common with committal hearings for the Federal Court.
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Links from the episode:

The Secret Agent: Peter Waters and Andrew Low on the rise and the risks of agentic AI in commerce
40:11

Xmas in February: Louise Klamka on the ACCC's compliance and enforcement priorities for 2026-27
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The World's Fair: Liana Witt and David Holmes on Australia's new unfair trading practices proposal
40:10