Transaction cost economics ( TCE ) has radically altered industrial organization\u27s explanation for so-called non-standard contracts, including exclusionary agreements that exclude rivals from access to inputs or customers. According to TCE, such integration usually reduces transaction costs without producing anticompetitive harm. TCE has accordingly exercised growing influence over antitrust doctrine, with courts invoking TCE\u27s teachings to justify revision of some doctrines once hostile to such contracts. Still, old habits die hard, even for courts of increasing economic sophistication. This Article critiques one such habit, namely, courts\u27continuing claim that firms use market or monopoly power to impose exclusionary contract...
The prohibition of certain types of anticompetitive unilateral conduct by firms possessing a substan...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
One of the long-accepted axioms of antitrust law is that the competitive danger posed by exclusivity...
Transaction cost economics ( TCE ) has radically altered industrial organization\u27s explanation fo...
Since Oliver Williamson published Markets and Hierarchies in 1975 transaction cost economics (TCE) h...
This paper briefly examines the contributions of Transaction Cost Economics (TCE) to antitrust analy...
Challenging traditional antitrust jurisprudence, Professor Alan J. Meese argues that the present str...
This Article contends that modern rule of reason analysis, informed by workable competition’s partia...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
For over three centuries, Anglo-American courts have assessed employee noncompete agreements under a...
This article seeks an answer to a question that should be well settled: for purposes of antitrust an...
Since Judge Hand\u27s pivotal opinion in United States v. Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa), the p...
The antitrust rules governing exclusionary conduct by dominant firms are among the most controversia...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
With many antitrust prohibitions, the existence of a violation depends upon whether the defendant po...
The prohibition of certain types of anticompetitive unilateral conduct by firms possessing a substan...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
One of the long-accepted axioms of antitrust law is that the competitive danger posed by exclusivity...
Transaction cost economics ( TCE ) has radically altered industrial organization\u27s explanation fo...
Since Oliver Williamson published Markets and Hierarchies in 1975 transaction cost economics (TCE) h...
This paper briefly examines the contributions of Transaction Cost Economics (TCE) to antitrust analy...
Challenging traditional antitrust jurisprudence, Professor Alan J. Meese argues that the present str...
This Article contends that modern rule of reason analysis, informed by workable competition’s partia...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
For over three centuries, Anglo-American courts have assessed employee noncompete agreements under a...
This article seeks an answer to a question that should be well settled: for purposes of antitrust an...
Since Judge Hand\u27s pivotal opinion in United States v. Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa), the p...
The antitrust rules governing exclusionary conduct by dominant firms are among the most controversia...
The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire signifi...
With many antitrust prohibitions, the existence of a violation depends upon whether the defendant po...
The prohibition of certain types of anticompetitive unilateral conduct by firms possessing a substan...
The focus of modern applications of economic reasoning to antitrust concerns has been on the more su...
One of the long-accepted axioms of antitrust law is that the competitive danger posed by exclusivity...