Antitrust law promotes competition in the service of economic efficiency. Government regulation may or may not promote either competition or efficiency, depending on both the goals of the agency and the effects of industry capture. Antitrust courts have long included regulated industries within their purview, working to ensure that regulated industries could not use the limits that regulation imposes on the normal competitive process to achieve anticompetitive ends. Doing so makes sense; an antitrust law that ignored anticompetitive behavior in any regulated industry would be a law full of holes. The role of antitrust in policing regulated industries appears to be changing, however. A cluster of Supreme Court decisions in the past decade ...
We examine the merits of subjecting an incumbent supplier of regulated services to antitrust review....
Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason...
This article discusses a more unified approach to two key areas of business law (corporate governanc...
Antitrust law is a residual regulator, picking up where legislative regulation leaves off. The relat...
When government regulates, it may either intentionally or unintentionally generate restraints that r...
In its March 26, 2016 issue, The Economist magazine announced that America needs a giant dose of co...
Antitrust law is a blunt instrument for dealing with many claims of anticompetitive standard setting...
In Verizon v. Trinko, the Supreme Court set forth a new stance toward antitrust oversight of regulat...
Mounting evidence that a number of key industries in the U.S. economy have become less competitive i...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
Competition policy has become more prominent while the thinking underlying those policies has underg...
The regulation of the competitive process for product distribution and promotion is an unsettled and...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
Although the antitrust laws apply to all industries, the application must be tempered in each case b...
(Excerpt) American society has a long history of encouraging competition and a long history of abhor...
We examine the merits of subjecting an incumbent supplier of regulated services to antitrust review....
Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason...
This article discusses a more unified approach to two key areas of business law (corporate governanc...
Antitrust law is a residual regulator, picking up where legislative regulation leaves off. The relat...
When government regulates, it may either intentionally or unintentionally generate restraints that r...
In its March 26, 2016 issue, The Economist magazine announced that America needs a giant dose of co...
Antitrust law is a blunt instrument for dealing with many claims of anticompetitive standard setting...
In Verizon v. Trinko, the Supreme Court set forth a new stance toward antitrust oversight of regulat...
Mounting evidence that a number of key industries in the U.S. economy have become less competitive i...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
Competition policy has become more prominent while the thinking underlying those policies has underg...
The regulation of the competitive process for product distribution and promotion is an unsettled and...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
Although the antitrust laws apply to all industries, the application must be tempered in each case b...
(Excerpt) American society has a long history of encouraging competition and a long history of abhor...
We examine the merits of subjecting an incumbent supplier of regulated services to antitrust review....
Antitrust law has largely succumbed to the hegemony of balancing. Courts applying the rule of reason...
This article discusses a more unified approach to two key areas of business law (corporate governanc...