Economics has reshaped antitrust enforcement over the last quarter century. Its impact has been most dramatic in merger analysis, with the shift toward unilateral effects theories and away from market concentration-related theories of collusion. Progress on both the theoretical and empirical fronts has also changed enforcement priors and competitive analyses concerning vertical restraints and monopolization. Economists also have made valuable assessments of the effectiveness of antitrust enforcement, though more work in this area is needed
First, we will review the basic tenets of the two underlying “schools” of antitrust policy, the stru...
The importance of economics to the analysis and enforcement of competition policy and law has increa...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Economics has reshaped antitrust enforcement over the last quarter century. Its impact has been most...
Over the past two to three decades economics has played an increasingly important role in the develo...
Both the law and economics of antitrust have undergone significant changein the past twenty years. T...
There is no antitrust law without antitrust law enforcement. Legal action turns economic and jurispr...
During the late 1970s and 1980s, the federal courts transformed antitrust rules and the federal enfo...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
Does recent federal merger regulation make economic sense? Merger activity has clearly increased thi...
Although tossed against the rocks elsewhere, the Law and Economics\u27 rational choice theories, wit...
The DOJ-FTC Merger Guidelines were developed for and best deal with horizontal mergers where the the...
The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice is charged with the responsibility of challengin...
The period from 1970 to the present - roughly a third of a century - has witnessed profound changes ...
First, we will review the basic tenets of the two underlying “schools” of antitrust policy, the stru...
The importance of economics to the analysis and enforcement of competition policy and law has increa...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Economics has reshaped antitrust enforcement over the last quarter century. Its impact has been most...
Over the past two to three decades economics has played an increasingly important role in the develo...
Both the law and economics of antitrust have undergone significant changein the past twenty years. T...
There is no antitrust law without antitrust law enforcement. Legal action turns economic and jurispr...
During the late 1970s and 1980s, the federal courts transformed antitrust rules and the federal enfo...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
Does recent federal merger regulation make economic sense? Merger activity has clearly increased thi...
Although tossed against the rocks elsewhere, the Law and Economics\u27 rational choice theories, wit...
The DOJ-FTC Merger Guidelines were developed for and best deal with horizontal mergers where the the...
The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice is charged with the responsibility of challengin...
The period from 1970 to the present - roughly a third of a century - has witnessed profound changes ...
First, we will review the basic tenets of the two underlying “schools” of antitrust policy, the stru...
The importance of economics to the analysis and enforcement of competition policy and law has increa...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...