Most late 19th-century US economists gave a rather cool welcome to the Sherman Act (1890) and, though less harshly, to the Clayton and FTC Acts (1914). A large literature has identified several explanations for this surprising attitude, calling into play the relation between big business and competition, a non-neoclassical notion of competition and a weak understanding of anti-competitive practices. Much less investigated is the reaction of British economists to the passing of antitrust statutes in the U.S. What we know is simply that none of them (including the top dog, Alfred Marshall) championed the adoption of a law-based competition policy during the three decades (1890-1920) of most intense antitrust debates in the U.S. The position o...
By any measure economists have played increasingly prominent roles in antitrust policy making, at le...
The goal of the paper is to investigate the extent of the influence of American antitrust tradition ...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
Most late 19th-century US economists gave a rather cool welcome to the Sherman Act (1890) and, thoug...
The development of marginalist, or neoclassical, economics led to a fifty-year long crisis in compet...
For over a hundred years, competition policy has been a central part of a market economy’s legal fra...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
Classical economists characterised free competition as, alternatively, freedom of contract and freed...
Classical economists characterised free competition as, alternatively, freedom of contract and freed...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
By any measure economists have played increasingly prominent roles in antitrust policy making, at le...
The goal of the paper is to investigate the extent of the influence of American antitrust tradition ...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...
Most late 19th-century US economists gave a rather cool welcome to the Sherman Act (1890) and, thoug...
The development of marginalist, or neoclassical, economics led to a fifty-year long crisis in compet...
For over a hundred years, competition policy has been a central part of a market economy’s legal fra...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
Passage of the Sherman Act in the United States in 1890 set the stage for a century of jurisprudence...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
The modern science of industrial organization grew out of a debate among lawyers and economists in t...
Classical economists characterised free competition as, alternatively, freedom of contract and freed...
Classical economists characterised free competition as, alternatively, freedom of contract and freed...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
Competition regulation nowadays is a result of a nexus of many intertwined phenomena, which under di...
By any measure economists have played increasingly prominent roles in antitrust policy making, at le...
The goal of the paper is to investigate the extent of the influence of American antitrust tradition ...
In this article, the authors interrogate legal and economic history to analyze the process by which ...