Business Why Americans should worry about Subway’s new ownership - Sen. Elizabeth Warren is trying to prevent a sandwich monopoly. / Make me a sammich, Senator Fakeahauntaus.

Why Americans should worry about Subway’s new ownership

00:26 /03:02

Dec. 4, 2023, 5:46 PM EST

By Helaine Olen

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., recently set off an internet food fight when she declared her support for the Federal Trade Commission’s investigation into whether a private equity firm’s purchase of sandwich chain Subway should be allowed to go ahead. “We do not need another private equity deal that could lead to higher food prices for consumers,” she wrote on X.

Right-wingers found Warren’s recipe less than appetizing. They accused her of everything from ignorance of economics to tasking government bureaucrats with settling the definition of a sandwich.

If you have multiple separate brands, “but they’re all owned by the same private equity firm, it’s not really any choice at all.”

But Warren is quite right. If completed, the $10 billion deal will hand control of 40,000 sandwich shops across the United States -- more than twice the footprint of either McDonald’s or Starbucks — to private equity firm Roark Capital. If this deal follows other cases of corporate concentration, it will likely be bad for workers, bad for franchise owners, bad for food suppliers and bad for your wallet.

Roark (yes, the name is a nod to Howard Roark from Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead”) already owns sandwich chains Jimmy John’s, McAlister’s Deli and Schlotzsky’s, which Subway’s agreement with franchisees lists as competitors, as well as Arby’s, another fast-food chain. If you have multiple separate brands, “but they’re all owned by the same private equity firm, it’s not really any choice at all,” Brian Callaci, the chief economist at the Open Markets Institute, told me. “It’s an illusion of choice.”

Monopolies and oligopolies (where a market is controlled by a small number of producers) give companies the power to push through price increases because customers have fewer options. More than a few observers believe the inflation of the past few years was accelerated by food and agricultural giants — aka “greedflation.” As Time magazine pointed out last year, four corporations are responsible for 60% of the market share for such dietary staples as pork, cookies, pasta and coffee.



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But the issues go deeper than just who owns the company where you buy lunch. The purchase of Subway, if completed, could also give Roark increasing power over both franchise owners who wish to enter or remain in the sandwich business and their suppliers. Ever-larger corporations have more power to dictate the price they will pay for products, which in turn puts the squeeze on supplier revenues, causing them to have less money for everything from goods to salaries. “We know that profit goes down for suppliers when consolidation happens upstream. We normally think about that in terms of Walmart or Amazon,” Callaci explains.

Since the Reagan administration, the federal government and the judiciary have taken the position that monopoly and oligopoly is only a problem when it results in higher costs to consumers. This framing, the brainchild of conservative legal theorist (and failed Supreme Court nominee) Robert Bork, holds that the market will act as an enforcer, disciplining companies that take advantage of their dominant position to gouge shoppers or offer subpar service. Even many Democrats and Democrat-appointed judges adopted Bork’s framework.

Corporate consolidation has contributed to an increase in inequality and raised costs in areas ranging from ticket sales to health care.

Starting about a decade ago, a small group of economists and lawyers — mostly, but not exclusively, on the left — began to argue this was a narrow framework. In their view, the Reagan-era orthodoxy ignored the broader impact of monopolies on the economy, such as lower wages when one employer dominates in a sector. And the old framework just didn’t match reality: over time, corporate consolidation has contributed to an increase in inequality and raised costs in areas ranging from ticket sales to health care. Hospital prices, for example, are 15% higher in regions where there’s a monopoly on the service. There’s no reason to suspect the same can’t happen when it comes to fast-food sandwiches.

This view was embraced not just by Warren, but by President Joe Biden. Lina Khan, Biden’s pick to head the Federal Trade Commission, was central in this intellectual reframing. At the FTC, Khan led a pushback on the power of Amazon and Meta, as well as a proposed ban on noncompete agreements, arguing they give employers too much power over not just their employees, but the job market.

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Corporate America and their cheerleaders aren’t happy about all these efforts. They seized on Warren’s Subway tweet to make a mockery of the meddling Feds. Who cares about a sandwich? You can always go eat a hamburger or salad! Or you can go to the corner deli and skip the corporate behemoths entirely. And, anyway, why is anyone wondering about a monopoly when it comes to sticking some food between two slices of bread? Surely, you can put it together yourself if the price isn’t right.



None of this convinces Warren — nor should it. “It’s pretty rich that critics rush to defend a private equity-backed effort to make a foot-long sandwich more expensive and chain restaurants more dominant,” she told me. “The reality is that for many Americans wanting a quick, affordable lunch, their nearest option is often a chain sandwich shop, and it’s deeply out of touch to say working people can go eat a hamburger somewhere else when executives jack up prices.”

Big business always has a reason why regulation shouldn’t happen, says Don Cohen, co-author of a new book on corporate public relations campaigns: “Corporations and their enablers have been using these arguments for over a century.” Wise words to remember the next time you hear about the corporate pushback to any proposed government action. As for Subway and Roark Capital, the Federal Trade Commission’s decision likely won’t come for at least another several months. Here’s hoping it doesn’t leave consumers with an unappetizing aftertaste.

Helaine Olen

Helaine Olen is the author of "Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry" and co-author of "The Index Card: Why Personal Finance Doesn't Have to be Complicated." She's been a columnist for the Washington Post and Slate, and her work has also appeared in numerous other publications including The New York Times and The Atlantic.

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Why Americans should worry about Subway’s new ownership

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Source : https://www.msnbc.com/opinion/msnbc...en-right-ftcs-subway-investigation-rcna127216
 
If clinical depression came in the form of a sandwich, it would be Subway.
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I haven't eaten that garbage in years, there's a reason the franchise in my town is now a used car lot....... I really don't care who owns it.
Where I live, they're all owned and staffed by stinky Pajeets anyway. I suspect that $40k franchise fee means "this immigrant will start their own business and create jobs!" under one of our unfortunate and increasingly out of date immigration visas.

I went to a Subway about a month ago after I ran out of food at home. A foot long combo was like $15, the quality of the food was as bad if not worse as I remember it from my college days. The steak tastes like dog food.

Firehouse costs a couple bucks more and tastes like real food. For the same price, I can get like 2 chick fil a sandwiches, waffle fries and a drink. Why the fuck would anyone ever go to Subway?
An alarmingly large percentage of problems in America are, ultimately, monopoly problems.
Because monopolies are highly efficient for the companies who run them -- ultimate power over supply and demand tend to lead to profits.

Still, "fast food sandwiches" are hardly at risk of creating a monopoly because of how willing people are to accept substitute goods.
Sandwich too expensive? People will go to the Chinese or Greek place instead. We've all looked at a menu board at some point and decided it was too expensive... the solution probably wasn't to starve until you could get home; it was to go somewhere else.

Monopolies are really only a problem when they control entire markets, where substitutes don't exist.
 
The dumb cunt that started the whole "yoga mat chemical" controversy also dropped bangers like this regarding the hidden danger posed by air travel:
The Apeel produce coating is also victim to this. The fact that the WEF sponsored it and the Apeel creator was labeled a "Young Global Leader" gave people the confirmation bias they needed. The articles tell people how glycerides are actually bad for you, they come from seeds that have "unhealthy fats", and/or Apeel has detectable contaminants.

If you know chemistry and toxicity/carcinogens, you can see the blatant manipulation that is going on in the articles.
https://www.momsacrossamerica.com/apeel Look at what words are hyperlinked and emphasized. I just realized this top result is the same woman. :story::lit:
 
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If clinical depression came in the form of a sandwich, it would be Subway.
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That just looks vile, In the UK Subway when they first started cropping up 15 - 20 years ago where always cheap and OK but Meh but another option that opened later at night than a local place that wasn't McDonnalds, KFC, Burger King etc but since then they have just turned into a vile mess that costs more than other options.

Hell I can go to a shop buy a baguette, small bottle of mayo or some other sauce often both, ham, cheese slices and a bag of salad for less than a sub costs and it will cost less and make a sandwich on the fly a footlong sausage, egg an cheese is near £9 in the closest subway to me but across the street is a small local (like less than 10 stores) I can get - Cumberland Ring Sausage, 2 Hash Browns, 2 Black Pudding slices and a fried egg with any sauce I want (including brown sauce that subway doesn't have) for £3.50 and for 50p more I can get a Tea, Coffee or Hot Coco.

The only people who go to the Subway are people who are just passing through or kids looking to just hang around inside etc.
 
Oh just bribe the cunt. She's worth 70 million dollars on a Congressional salary. Her "concerns" about regulating the corporations are about as real as her Indian DNA.
Like the Marx Bros quote: ''those are my principles, and if you don't like them... well, I have others', I'm sure the pseudo squaw will find nothing more to say if her palms are crossed with silver. The lack of an immediately proffered donation to one of her good causes upset her immediately. The required amount has therefore doubled.
 
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I'm glad the demise of American Malls really came after my Celiac kicked in, why go to Subway when you could stop at a Great Steak and Potato Company?
 
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Ah yes, worried about a monopoly and the increase in price.

Do tell us how you plan to stop the increase in price via monopoly; when you're concerned with global warming, cow farts, the destruction of our food manufacturing, and a host of other problems that direct all of the food industry.
 
You could also go to your local cafe/restaurant to get a baguette sandwich, probably will be better.
 
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