When firms collude and charge supra-competitive prices, consumers can bring antitrust lawsuits against the firms. When the litigation cost is low, firms accept the cost as just another cost of doing business, whereas when the cost is high, the firms lower the price to deter litigation. Class action is modeled as a mechanism that allows plaintiffs and attorneys to obtain economies of scale. We show that class actions, and the firms\u27 incentive to block them, may or may not be socially desirable. Agency problems, settlement, fee-shifting, treble damages, public enforcement, and sustaining collusion through repeat play are also considered
We compare private and public enforcement of the antitrust laws in a simple strategic model of antit...
This Article does not attempt to identify socially harmful tying arrangements. Rather, it draws upo...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...
Recent empirical studies demonstrate five reasons why antitrust class action cases are essential: (1...
The U.S. system has relied heavily on antitrust class actions as a means of ensuring compensation an...
The dominant view in the antitrust field is that private enforcement cases, and especially class act...
The predominant view in the antitrust field has been that private enforcement, and especially class ...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Many firms require consumers, employees, and suppliers to sign class action waivers as a condition o...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Private litigation is the predominant means of antitrust enforcement in the United States. Other jur...
This article uses economic categories to show how the reorganisation of civil procedure in the case ...
This Article claims that there may be a subset of cases in which private rights of action may work w...
If the antitrust remedy a private party pursues would likely have anticompetitive consequences, woul...
This Paper presents information about forty of the largest recent successful private antitrust cases...
We compare private and public enforcement of the antitrust laws in a simple strategic model of antit...
This Article does not attempt to identify socially harmful tying arrangements. Rather, it draws upo...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...
Recent empirical studies demonstrate five reasons why antitrust class action cases are essential: (1...
The U.S. system has relied heavily on antitrust class actions as a means of ensuring compensation an...
The dominant view in the antitrust field is that private enforcement cases, and especially class act...
The predominant view in the antitrust field has been that private enforcement, and especially class ...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Many firms require consumers, employees, and suppliers to sign class action waivers as a condition o...
We study the effect of encouraging private actions for breaches of competition law. We develop a mod...
Private litigation is the predominant means of antitrust enforcement in the United States. Other jur...
This article uses economic categories to show how the reorganisation of civil procedure in the case ...
This Article claims that there may be a subset of cases in which private rights of action may work w...
If the antitrust remedy a private party pursues would likely have anticompetitive consequences, woul...
This Paper presents information about forty of the largest recent successful private antitrust cases...
We compare private and public enforcement of the antitrust laws in a simple strategic model of antit...
This Article does not attempt to identify socially harmful tying arrangements. Rather, it draws upo...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...