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Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos
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Amazon is impervious to tweets 

Associated Press

Amazon is impervious to tweets 

The president’s rants make it more difficult to scrutinize the company for antitrust violations

Many of President Donald Trump’s tweets can be classified as foolhardy, but his series of recent rants about Amazon were over the top. I will leave to others the implications for democracy when a U.S. president singles out a company that he wants to punish, but from a business point of view, his crusade is nuts. For all of Mr. Trump’s huffing and puffing, there is little he can do to inflict pain on Amazon and its chief executive, Jeff Bezos. It’s amazing that he can’t see it.

The president complains that Amazon doesn’t pay taxes. For the most part, that hasn’t been true; between 2007 and 2015, it paid a combined tax rate (for federal, state, local and foreign) of 13 percent, on par with many big companies. Last year, however, it did not pay any federal taxes. Why? It appears that Amazon was able to take advantage of some provisions in Mr. Trump’s pride and joy, the tax cut he signed in December. In addition, while Amazon for years fought efforts to force it to collect state and local sales tax, it has begun doing so, even collecting from its third-party vendors. Besides, there is simply no way Mr. Trump can target one company for a different tax treatment than other companies. So much for taxes.

According to the news site Axios, Mr. Trump has mused about using antitrust law to whack Amazon. In fact, there are many people who believe that big tech companies like Amazon, Facebook and Google deserve far more antitrust scrutiny than they’ve gotten, and indeed, that antitrust policy needs to better reflect their enormous power. I’m one of them.

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But singling out Amazon is no way to go about it. It causes antitrust experts to shrink from the subject because they don’t want to be seen as doing Mr. Trump’s dirty work. And it puts the Justice Department’s antitrust division in a terrible spot. Having already sued to stop AT&T from buying Time Warner after Mr. Trump complained about the deal, the division’s leaders would look like lackeys if they went after Amazon, too. Indeed, given the state of antitrust law, which is very forgiving of big companies making big acquisitions, there is nothing for the government to go after Amazon for.

It’s possible, I suppose, that Mr. Trump could prevent Amazon from getting government contracts. In 2013, the company successfully brought cloud computing to the CIA, and it is the front-runner for a 10-year, multibillion-dollar cloud computing contract with the Pentagon. Other tech companies are lobbying to get a piece of the contract, and perhaps the Defense Department will conclude that it’s not worth inviting the president’s ire to give it to the company with the most experience and biggest market share. Fear not. Amazon had over $177 billion in revenue last year and is on track to easily top $200 billion in 2018. If it never sees another penny from the government, it will do just fine.

Finally, there is the relationship that Mr. Trump has complained about most frequently: Amazon’s business with the U.S. Postal Service. As he tweeted on Tuesday: “I am right about Amazon costing the United States Post Office massive amounts of money for being their Delivery Boy. Amazon should pay these costs (plus) and not have them bourne by the American Taxpayer. Many billions of dollars. P.O. leaders don’t have a clue (or do they?)!”

Back in 2012, the Postal Service was in deep trouble. A self-financed agency since the 1980s, it had lost $25 billion over the previous six years, and $6.5 billion in just the first six months of the year. It had three big problems. First, even though it was expected to generate its own revenue, Congress made it hard to do things that could save billions, like closing rural post offices or ending Saturday delivery. Second, Congress imposed a bizarre requirement that it pre-fund retiree health care premiums to the tune of $5.5 billion a year. And third, fewer and fewer people were sending first-class mail.

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The decline in first-class mail continues today. But postal revenue has largely stabilized at around $70 billion, and losses in 2017 were down to $2.7 billion. Why? Because, despite the congressional impediments, the Postal Service has done some serious cost-cutting. Also, its package-delivery business is going gangbusters. This is almost entirely thanks to Amazon, which has started to rely on the Postal Service to get packages to customers’ front doors.

Although the terms of Amazon’s postal contract have never been revealed, it is implausible that the deal costs the post office money, as Mr. Trump claims. What’s more, if he thinks Amazon is getting too sweet a deal, he is actually in a position to do something about it. The Postal Service’s overseer, its Board of Governors, is supposed to comprise 11 people. It currently has two: Megan Brennan, the postmaster general, and her deputy, Ronald Stroman. Every other seat is empty.

Mr. Trump has nominated three people for the board, but even if all three were approved by the Senate, the board would still lack a quorum. And without a quorum, it can’t do things like, well, renegotiate big contracts. It would be easy enough for Mr. Trump to find nominees who would vow to force Amazon to pay more. But to do that, he’d have to be paying attention to his job.

Mr. Trump’s real motivation is doubtless to get back at Mr. Bezos for his ownership of The Washington Post, which regularly publishes unflattering revelations about his presidency and business life. But he really should have thought twice before going after Amazon and its CEO.

There may be some chief executives who would be rattled by attacks from the president. Mr. Bezos is not one of them. You’ll notice that so far he hasn’t responded to Mr. Trump’s tweets, and he won’t. He’s too smart for that. And while Mr. Trump has managed to hurt Amazon’s valuation, you would be hard-pressed to find a CEO who spends less time worrying about his company’s share price than Mr. Bezos. Eventually, the market will realize that Mr. Trump’s threats are toothless, and the stock will come back up again.

There is a final reason why Mr. Trump’s attacks on Amazon are so misguided. If he could put aside his venom for Mr. Bezos, he might be able to see that Amazon is a company that’s doing exactly what he says he wants American companies to do. It’s creating jobs, not just tech jobs in Seattle but blue-collar jobs in the warehouses it has built around the country. It pays most of the tuition when workers want to learn skills that will lead to better jobs. It’s in the process of choosing a second headquarters city where it will eventually employ up to 50,000 workers. It’s getting into health care in an effort to bring down costs. It treats customers better than any other tech company. Oh, and its chief competitor isn’t an American company but a Chinese one, Alibaba.

So go after Amazon if you insist, Mr. President. But if you keep it up, this is one crusade you may live to regret.

Joe Nocera is a Bloomberg View columnist (jnocera3@bloomberg.net).

First Published: April 6, 2018, 4:00 a.m.

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Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos  (Associated Press)
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