Redirected from Interstate Commerce Act
The Interstate Commerce Commission is often cited as a classic example in which an agency intended to protect consumers is "captured" by the industry that it intended to regulate. The Commission was accused of acting in the interests of the trucking industry by causing prices to be set at artificially high levels and by using regulation to prevent new entrants from competing.
It was replaced by the Surface Transportation Board[?] in 1995, after losing much of its strength due to deregulation.
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