Current tying law uses a bifurcated rule of reason, condemning ties that have either tying market power or a substantial tied foreclosure share, absent an offsetting procompetitive justification. Many critics of tying law advocate overruling the first branch, commonly called the quasi per se rule, thus making all ties without a substantial foreclosure share per se legal. This article shows they are mistaken. Even without a substantial foreclosure share, ties with market power restrain competition in ways that are likely to harm both consumer welfare and total welfare as long as they foreclose a substantial dollar amount of sales. Critics claim that these effects do not legally count as anticompetitive because they do not impair rivals, b...
Few types of antitrust conduct have received as much treatment from the Supreme Court as tying arran...
Today, the need for nimble financial regulation is paramount. The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill h...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...
Notwithstanding hundreds of court decisions, tying arrangements remain enigmatic. Conclusions that g...
Many tying arrangements are used by firms that do not have substantial market power in either of the...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
This article asserts a comprehensive response to Elhauge’s provocative arguments. With respect to ty...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
For more than a century, antitrust law has operated under two rules of analysis: rule of reason and ...
Various arguments attempting to resurrect the single monopoly profit theory of tying have been made,...
The U.S. Supreme Court has employed the per se standard for illegality of tying arrangements under a...
A tying arrangement is a seller’s requirement that a customer may purchase its “tying” product only ...
Tying arrangements often increase welfare by promoting product quality and protecting the supplier\u...
The last four years have been busy years in shaping the future of antitrust. Beginning with Brown Sh...
The law of tying arrangements as it stands does not correspond with modern economic analysis. Theref...
Few types of antitrust conduct have received as much treatment from the Supreme Court as tying arran...
Today, the need for nimble financial regulation is paramount. The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill h...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...
Notwithstanding hundreds of court decisions, tying arrangements remain enigmatic. Conclusions that g...
Many tying arrangements are used by firms that do not have substantial market power in either of the...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
This article asserts a comprehensive response to Elhauge’s provocative arguments. With respect to ty...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
For more than a century, antitrust law has operated under two rules of analysis: rule of reason and ...
Various arguments attempting to resurrect the single monopoly profit theory of tying have been made,...
The U.S. Supreme Court has employed the per se standard for illegality of tying arrangements under a...
A tying arrangement is a seller’s requirement that a customer may purchase its “tying” product only ...
Tying arrangements often increase welfare by promoting product quality and protecting the supplier\u...
The last four years have been busy years in shaping the future of antitrust. Beginning with Brown Sh...
The law of tying arrangements as it stands does not correspond with modern economic analysis. Theref...
Few types of antitrust conduct have received as much treatment from the Supreme Court as tying arran...
Today, the need for nimble financial regulation is paramount. The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill h...
Antitrust law condemns price-fixing cartels and seeks to encourage private suits against the conspir...