This article demonstrates that significant net efficiencies from a merger could cause prices to decrease, even if the merger results in a monopoly. The article also shows that a price focus would require substantially more efficiencies to justify an otherwise anticompetitive merger than would an efficiency focus (in other words, it re-does the Williamsonian merger tradeoff, using price to consumers instead of net efficiencies as its focus). We demonstrate this by calculating how large the necessary efficiency gains would have to be to prevent price increases under different market conditions
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
Three years ago, the Antitrust Division and the Federal Trade Commission revised their Horizontal Me...
The aim of competition policy is to balance market power so as to protect and improve consumer welfa...
This article demonstrates that significant net efficiencies from a merger could cause prices to decr...
This is one of the first articles to demonstrate that the primary goal of antitrust is neither exclu...
This article analyzes the Canadian Superior Propane decision, apparently the first merger decision i...
When should the government challenge a merger that might increase market power but also generate eff...
In a Cournot model with differentiated products, we demonstrate that merger efficiencies in the form...
This article looks first at the process courts use to resolve merger challenges and finds that in th...
Mergers of business firms violate the antitrust laws when they threaten to lessen competition, which...
In the theoretical literature, strong arguments have been provided in support of the efficiency defe...
In the theoretical literature, strong arguments have been provided in support of the ef-ficiency def...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43580/1/11151_2005_Article_BF02229761.p...
The recent significant increase in merger activity among the nation\u27s large industrial corporatio...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
Three years ago, the Antitrust Division and the Federal Trade Commission revised their Horizontal Me...
The aim of competition policy is to balance market power so as to protect and improve consumer welfa...
This article demonstrates that significant net efficiencies from a merger could cause prices to decr...
This is one of the first articles to demonstrate that the primary goal of antitrust is neither exclu...
This article analyzes the Canadian Superior Propane decision, apparently the first merger decision i...
When should the government challenge a merger that might increase market power but also generate eff...
In a Cournot model with differentiated products, we demonstrate that merger efficiencies in the form...
This article looks first at the process courts use to resolve merger challenges and finds that in th...
Mergers of business firms violate the antitrust laws when they threaten to lessen competition, which...
In the theoretical literature, strong arguments have been provided in support of the efficiency defe...
In the theoretical literature, strong arguments have been provided in support of the ef-ficiency def...
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate these new anti-merger instruments on the basis of economic ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43580/1/11151_2005_Article_BF02229761.p...
The recent significant increase in merger activity among the nation\u27s large industrial corporatio...
From its modern origins more than thirty years ago federal merger policy has centered around the use...
Three years ago, the Antitrust Division and the Federal Trade Commission revised their Horizontal Me...
The aim of competition policy is to balance market power so as to protect and improve consumer welfa...