On March 22, 1988, the Attorneys General of eight states filed antitrust actions in state and federal courts\u27 alleging that major insurance and reinsurance companies colluded to boycott specific types of insurance coverage in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act. The suits suggest that this collusion was responsible for the unprecedented increase in premiums and concomitant erosion of coverage that has come to be known as the insurance crisis. \u27 The lawsuits have provoked fierce denials by insurance industry participants, including assertions that the suits, which came in an election year, were politically motivated.\u27 The litigation is certain to involve some of the country\u27s highest-paid law firms in a protracted struggle...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
The United States Supreme Court held that McCarran-Ferguson immunity did not attach for domestic ins...
The proper role of neoclassical economic theory in the resolution of antitrust disputes will continu...
On March 22, 1988, the Attorneys General of eight states filed antitrust actions in state and federa...
The social significance of the insurance antitrust suits extends beyond the specific legal issues of...
The insurance crisis of the mid-1980s is over, and the insurance cycle has turned, just as it did in...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
The conservative critique of antitrust law has been highly influential and has facilitated a transfo...
In their article, Sources of the Crisis in Liability Insurance: An Economic Analysis, Richard Clarke...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
The movement to reform the McCarran-Ferguson Act is misplaced. The Supreme Court and the lower feder...
In a recent opinion, Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical Society, the United States Supreme Court dec...
In this article we ask (1) under what circumstances are competitor suits meritorious, and (2) do exi...
The U.S. Supreme Court held that litigation for anticompetitive ends (“sham litigation”) must be “ba...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
The United States Supreme Court held that McCarran-Ferguson immunity did not attach for domestic ins...
The proper role of neoclassical economic theory in the resolution of antitrust disputes will continu...
On March 22, 1988, the Attorneys General of eight states filed antitrust actions in state and federa...
The social significance of the insurance antitrust suits extends beyond the specific legal issues of...
The insurance crisis of the mid-1980s is over, and the insurance cycle has turned, just as it did in...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
The conservative critique of antitrust law has been highly influential and has facilitated a transfo...
In their article, Sources of the Crisis in Liability Insurance: An Economic Analysis, Richard Clarke...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
Over the past forty years, the federal courts have relied more and more on economic theory to inform...
The movement to reform the McCarran-Ferguson Act is misplaced. The Supreme Court and the lower feder...
In a recent opinion, Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical Society, the United States Supreme Court dec...
In this article we ask (1) under what circumstances are competitor suits meritorious, and (2) do exi...
The U.S. Supreme Court held that litigation for anticompetitive ends (“sham litigation”) must be “ba...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
The United States Supreme Court held that McCarran-Ferguson immunity did not attach for domestic ins...
The proper role of neoclassical economic theory in the resolution of antitrust disputes will continu...