For nearly a century, Major League Baseball (MLB) has enjoyed antitrust immunity. No other sports league or organization is similarly exempt. Shielded by precedent from antitrust prosecution, MLB clubs are free to exploit both monopolistic and monopsonistic power. In this paper, we call for a repeal of MLB’s antitrust exemption. In doing so, we examine some recent antitrust challenges to MLB conduct, the current interest of the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission in labor market issues, the welfare consequences of the exemption, and a policy recommendation for legislative action
This note calls for an end to Major League Baseball\u27s statutory exemption from antitrust law for ...
Major League Baseball is in the process of collectivizing data used in sports betting. This could be...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
San Jose\u27s antitrust suit against Major League Baseball renews the challenge of defining the scop...
This note will describe the creation and development of the antitrust exemption granted to Major Lea...
Minor League Baseball is a half-billion dollar a year industry in the United States. It has grown to...
This Article will examine the economic structure of the professional sports industry, explore profes...
This Note examines how Major League Baseball’s (MLB) current free agent system is restraining trade ...
As professional baseball’s unique exemption to antitrust law celebrates its one-hundredth year of ex...
In 1890, Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act to protect competition in the marketplace. Federa...
Jacques Barzun once commented that [w]hoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better...
Congressional discussion of baseball\u27s antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a...
In this article, Adam Renfro examines the legal basis for Major League Baseball\u27s antitrust exemp...
In 1922, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that baseball was not interstate commerce and ...
Major League Baseball (Baseball) traditionally has enjoyed an exemption from antitrust laws even tho...
This note calls for an end to Major League Baseball\u27s statutory exemption from antitrust law for ...
Major League Baseball is in the process of collectivizing data used in sports betting. This could be...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
San Jose\u27s antitrust suit against Major League Baseball renews the challenge of defining the scop...
This note will describe the creation and development of the antitrust exemption granted to Major Lea...
Minor League Baseball is a half-billion dollar a year industry in the United States. It has grown to...
This Article will examine the economic structure of the professional sports industry, explore profes...
This Note examines how Major League Baseball’s (MLB) current free agent system is restraining trade ...
As professional baseball’s unique exemption to antitrust law celebrates its one-hundredth year of ex...
In 1890, Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act to protect competition in the marketplace. Federa...
Jacques Barzun once commented that [w]hoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better...
Congressional discussion of baseball\u27s antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a...
In this article, Adam Renfro examines the legal basis for Major League Baseball\u27s antitrust exemp...
In 1922, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that baseball was not interstate commerce and ...
Major League Baseball (Baseball) traditionally has enjoyed an exemption from antitrust laws even tho...
This note calls for an end to Major League Baseball\u27s statutory exemption from antitrust law for ...
Major League Baseball is in the process of collectivizing data used in sports betting. This could be...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection