Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason are told to balance a restraint\u27s procompetitive effects against its anticompetitive impact. Mergers once deemed anticompetitive solely because they facilitated the exercise of market power are now evaluated by weighing the anticompetitive effects of such increased power against any efficiencies created by the transaction. Finally, some activities once deemed per se illegal are now subject to a balancing approach, either by explicit application of the rule of reason, or by recognition of certain affirmative defenses to otherwise per se violations. Unlike many other balancing tests, the balancing framework familiar to antitrust scholars an...
In Philadelphia National Bank (PNB), the Supreme Court held that it is improper to weigh a merger\u2...
Antitrust law promotes competition in the service of economic efficiency. Government regulation may ...
The goals of antitrust law continue to be debated because there is no single goal that is unambiguou...
Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason...
Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition-whether def...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
Anticompetitive conduct toward upstream trading partners may have the effect of benefiting downstrea...
Antitrust’s rule of reason was born out of a thirty-year Supreme Court debate concerning the legalit...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
Lately, much attention has been given to the scope of the antitrust laws. This discussion has two ov...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
The Rule of Reason, which has come to dominate modern antitrust law, allows defendants the opportuni...
This Note analyzes how courts\u27 leniency affects a particular category of anticompetitive buyer co...
In this paper, we discuss the problem of the rule of reason and the welfare standard in antitrust. W...
United States antitrust policy is said to promote some version of economic welfare. Antitrust promot...
In Philadelphia National Bank (PNB), the Supreme Court held that it is improper to weigh a merger\u2...
Antitrust law promotes competition in the service of economic efficiency. Government regulation may ...
The goals of antitrust law continue to be debated because there is no single goal that is unambiguou...
Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason...
Modern antitrust law pursues a seemingly unitary goal: competition. In fact, competition-whether def...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
Anticompetitive conduct toward upstream trading partners may have the effect of benefiting downstrea...
Antitrust’s rule of reason was born out of a thirty-year Supreme Court debate concerning the legalit...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
Lately, much attention has been given to the scope of the antitrust laws. This discussion has two ov...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
The Rule of Reason, which has come to dominate modern antitrust law, allows defendants the opportuni...
This Note analyzes how courts\u27 leniency affects a particular category of anticompetitive buyer co...
In this paper, we discuss the problem of the rule of reason and the welfare standard in antitrust. W...
United States antitrust policy is said to promote some version of economic welfare. Antitrust promot...
In Philadelphia National Bank (PNB), the Supreme Court held that it is improper to weigh a merger\u2...
Antitrust law promotes competition in the service of economic efficiency. Government regulation may ...
The goals of antitrust law continue to be debated because there is no single goal that is unambiguou...