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The Antitrust Paradigm
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

The Antitrust Paradigm

  • Categories: Law

At a time when tech giants have amassed vast market power, Jonathan Baker shows how laws and regulations can be updated to ensure more competition. The sooner courts and antitrust enforcement agencies stop listening to the Chicago school and start paying attention to modern economics, the sooner Americans will reap the benefits of competition.

Antitrust Law in Perspective
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1340

Antitrust Law in Perspective

  • Categories: Law

Gavil, Kovacic and Baker's Antitrust Law in Perspective: Cases, Concepts, and Problems in Competition Policy builds on the strengths of the first edition with completely updated cases, notes, and sidebars, reflecting the latest developments and commentary. It includes: Expanded economic coverage A thoroughly revised chapter on dominant firm conduct A thoroughly revised chapter on distribution restraints that comprehensively addresses the Supreme Court's Leegin decision Revised and expanded treatment of the analysis of competitor collaborations and joint ventures Revised state-of-the art conspiracy and merger chapters Increased attention to international and comparative developments Some older cases have been reduced to notes in favor of newer cases that better reflect current trends.

Antitrust Law in Perspective
  • Language: en

Antitrust Law in Perspective

New Edition available for fall 2024 classes from authors Gavil, Kovacic, and Baker.

Why Price Correlations Do Not Define Antitrust Markets
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 60

Why Price Correlations Do Not Define Antitrust Markets

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1987
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Antitrust Enterprise
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 392

The Antitrust Enterprise

  • Categories: Law

After thirty years, the debate over antitrust's ideology has quieted. Most now agree that the protection of consumer welfare should be the only goal of antitrust laws. Execution, however, is another matter. The rules of antitrust remain unfocused, insufficiently precise, and excessively complex. The problem of poorly designed rules is severe, because in the short run rules weigh much more heavily than principles. At bottom, antitrust is a defensible enterprise only if it can make the microeconomy work better, after accounting for the considerable costs of operating the system. The Antitrust Enterprise is the first authoritative and compact exposition of antitrust law since Robert Bork's classic The Antitrust Paradox was published more than thirty years ago. It confronts not only the problems of poorly designed, overly complex, and inconsistent antitrust rules but also the current disarray of antitrust's rule of reason, offering a coherent and workable set of solutions. The result is an antitrust policy that is faithful to the consumer welfare principle but that is also more readily manageable by the federal courts and other antitrust tribunals.

Antitrust Law in the New Economy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 330

Antitrust Law in the New Economy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Competition and consumer protection -- The economics of information -- Information and market power -- Agreements on information -- Exclusion by information -- "Confusopoly" and information asymmetries -- Privacy as an information product -- Information and intellectual property -- Restraint of trade and freedom of speech

United States v. Apple
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 337

United States v. Apple

  • Categories: Law

In 2012, when the Justice Department sued Apple and five book publishers for price fixing, many observers sided with the defendants. It was a reminder that, in practice, Americans are ambivalent about competition. Chris Sagers shows why protecting price competition, even when it hurts some of us, is crucial if antitrust law is to preserve markets.

Mergers, Merger Control, and Remedies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 283

Mergers, Merger Control, and Remedies

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2015
  • -
  • Publisher: MIT Press

A comprehensive analysis of merger outcomes based on all empirical studies, with an assessment of the effectiveness of antitrust policy toward mergers. In recent decades, antitrust investigations and cases targeting mergers—including those involving Google, Ticketmaster, and much of the domestic airline industry—have reshaped industries and changed business practices profoundly. And yet there has been a relative dearth of detailed evaluations of the effects of mergers and the effectiveness of merger policy. In this book, John Kwoka, a noted authority on industrial organization, examines all reliable empirical studies of the effect of specific mergers and develops entirely new information...

How the Chicago School Overshot the Mark
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 328

How the Chicago School Overshot the Mark

  • Categories: Law

How the Chicago School Overshot the Mark is about the rise and recent fall of American antitrust. It is a collection of 15 essays, almost all expressing a deep concern that conservative economic analysis is leading judges and enforcement officials toward an approach that will ultimately harm consumer welfare. For the past 40 years or so, U.S. antitrust has been dominated intellectually by an unusually conservative style of economic analysis. Its advocates, often referred to as "The Chicago School," argue that the free market (better than any unelected band of regulators) can do a better job of achieving efficiency and encouraging innovation than intrusive regulation. The cutting edge of Chic...

The Microsoft Antitrust Cases
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 461

The Microsoft Antitrust Cases

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-11-21
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  • Publisher: MIT Press

A comprehensive account of the decades-long, multiple antitrust actions against Microsoft and an assessment of the effectiveness of antitrust law in the digital age. For more than two decades, the U.S. Department of Justice, various states, the European Commission, and many private litigants pursued antitrust actions against the tech giant Microsoft. In investigating and prosecuting Microsoft, federal and state prosecutors were playing their traditional role of reining in a corporate power intent on eliminating competition. Seen from another perspective, however, the government's prosecution of Microsoft—in which it deployed the century-old Sherman Antitrust Act in the volatile and evolvin...