Episode Details
Back to EpisodesThe Rise and Fall of the ICC
Episode 5429
Published 3 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
The Interstate Commerce Commission, established in 1887 as the first federal regulatory agency in American history, was created to tame the railroad monopolies that were crushing farmers, small businesses, and entire communities under predatory pricing schemes. Over the course of its 108-year existence, the ICC transformed from a bold experiment in government regulation into a cautionary tale about how regulatory agencies can be captured by the very industries they were designed to control, before finally being abolished in 1995.
The railroads of the Gilded Age wielded power that modern Americans can barely imagine. They controlled the only practical means of long-distance transportation, giving them life-and-death authority over entire towns and regions. Railroads charged whatever the market would bear, offering secret rebates to favored shippers while gouging farmers and small businesses who had no alternative. Rate discrimination could make or break a community overnight, and the political corruption that railroad money purchased made legislative remedies nearly impossible.
The ICC was Congress's answer to public outrage, but its design reflected the political compromises necessary to pass any regulation at all. The commission had the power to investigate complaints and declare rates unreasonable, but early court decisions stripped it of meaningful enforcement authority. For its first two decades, the ICC was largely a paper tiger, issuing rulings that railroads ignored with impunity while the Supreme Court systematically narrowed its jurisdiction.
Progressive Era reforms gave the ICC real teeth, and for a period it functioned as an effective regulator. But as the twentieth century progressed and competition from trucks, automobiles, and airlines eroded railroad monopoly power, the ICC increasingly served to protect established carriers from competition rather than protecting the public from monopoly abuse. The agency that had been created to fight corporate power became an instrument for preserving it.
This episode traces the complete arc of America's first regulatory agency from its idealistic creation through its capture by industry to its ultimate abolition, revealing lessons about the life cycle of government regulation that remain urgently relevant today.