This article examines optimal policy toward coordinated oligopolistic price elevation. First, it analyzes the social welfare implications of enforcement, elaborating the value of deterrence and the nature of possible chilling effects. Then, it explores a variety of means of detection, with particular attention to the sorts of errors that may arise under each. Finally, it examines the level and type of sanctions that should be employed. It emerges that there is remarkably little overlap in content between the present investigation and prior legal policy work on the subject. Some central issues have been ignored while particular resolutions of others have been taken for granted, thereby indicating the need for wholesale reassessment
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...
Sound antitrust law and policy is in tension with industrial policy. Antitrust promotes consumer wel...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
This article compares two policies toward coordinated oligopolistic price elevation. Most commentato...
This paper reports on a study of recent Antitrust Division horizontal price fixing cases. The object...
The article attempts to sort out some of this confusion caused by the legal journey from Albrecht to...
This article takes a fresh look at a longstanding issue in antitrust economics and policy: the probl...
The article uses a specific case to illustrate how three multinational firms used antidumping law to...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
Courts and commentators have painstakingly analyzed antitrust policy toward horizontal price fixing,...
Although the interpretation and application of the federal antitrust laws are replete with paradoxes...
In this Article I present a two-pronged analysis of vertical restraints, one in law and one in econo...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Resale price maintenance is a particularly dangerous vertical intrabrand restraint. Because of its d...
This Article demonstrates the relationship between socio-economics and antitrust law. It uses socio-...
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...
Sound antitrust law and policy is in tension with industrial policy. Antitrust promotes consumer wel...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...
This article compares two policies toward coordinated oligopolistic price elevation. Most commentato...
This paper reports on a study of recent Antitrust Division horizontal price fixing cases. The object...
The article attempts to sort out some of this confusion caused by the legal journey from Albrecht to...
This article takes a fresh look at a longstanding issue in antitrust economics and policy: the probl...
The article uses a specific case to illustrate how three multinational firms used antidumping law to...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
Courts and commentators have painstakingly analyzed antitrust policy toward horizontal price fixing,...
Although the interpretation and application of the federal antitrust laws are replete with paradoxes...
In this Article I present a two-pronged analysis of vertical restraints, one in law and one in econo...
Coordinated price fixing among firms in an industry remains one of the few practices which is per se...
Resale price maintenance is a particularly dangerous vertical intrabrand restraint. Because of its d...
This Article demonstrates the relationship between socio-economics and antitrust law. It uses socio-...
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...
Sound antitrust law and policy is in tension with industrial policy. Antitrust promotes consumer wel...
Oligopoly industry structure, where a small number of firms dominate a large percentage of the marke...