Meher Sethi

Meher is a recent graduate of Yale University where he studied Ethics, Politics, and Economics (EP&E) with a concentration in Antitrust and AI, and an incoming analyst at Quantitative Economic Solutions. His senior thesis on algorithmic collusion, "The Algorithmic Antitrust Paradox" advised by Professor Fiona Scott Morton, won Yale University's George Hume Prize for best EP&E thesis. Previously, he has worked in Senator Durbin’s DC office, the Antitrust section in the Connecticut Attorney General’s Office, and the American Economic Liberties Project. He also currently serves as an Economics Ambassador for the ABA Antitrust Law Section (Media & Technology committee).

The House Budget Bill Is One Big Beautiful Boon for Code Cartels

Meher Sethi argues that a little-noticed provision in the federal budget recently passed by the House will gut state laws protecting consumers from algorithmic price-fixing.

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