This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Transition?” sponsored by the American Antitrust Institute on June 24, 2010. It proposes a different paradigm, which more precisely describes regulation and competition in the insurance sector. This relationship is the shifting boundary between state and federal regulation instead of a boundary between the public and private sectors. The McCarran-Ferguson Act was adopted to protect firms acting in the business of insurance from federal antitrust scrutiny, but its language and impact goes far beyond federal competition law. So broad is the exemption that the modern effect of the Act only incidentally concerns antitrust. Fundamentally, the...
Since 1945, the McCarran-Ferguson Act (MFA) has shielded the “business of insurance” from antitrust ...
For over a century, there has been a continuing controversy concerning state versus federal regulati...
In health care, the increase in market concentration on both the insurer side and the provider side ...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
Among America\u27s financial institutions, insurance firms alone are largely immune from federal reg...
Currently the Antitrust Modernization Commission is considering numerous proposals for adjusting the...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
State insurance regulation may be broadly divided into two categories. The first generally encompass...
Since 1945 Congress has exempted certain activities of insurance companies from federal antitrust sc...
The movement to reform the McCarran-Ferguson Act is misplaced. The Supreme Court and the lower feder...
In both corporate and banking law, firms are empowered to select from a limited menu of options the ...
Any substantial inquiry into the functioning of the insurance commissioner in American society poses...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
So for more than six decades, the insurance industry has operated largely beyond the reach of federa...
Correspondence issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "This let...
Since 1945, the McCarran-Ferguson Act (MFA) has shielded the “business of insurance” from antitrust ...
For over a century, there has been a continuing controversy concerning state versus federal regulati...
In health care, the increase in market concentration on both the insurer side and the provider side ...
This article was presented at a symposium entitled “Public and Private: Are the Boundaries in Tran...
Among America\u27s financial institutions, insurance firms alone are largely immune from federal reg...
Currently the Antitrust Modernization Commission is considering numerous proposals for adjusting the...
The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that federal legislation generally, including the antitrust ...
State insurance regulation may be broadly divided into two categories. The first generally encompass...
Since 1945 Congress has exempted certain activities of insurance companies from federal antitrust sc...
The movement to reform the McCarran-Ferguson Act is misplaced. The Supreme Court and the lower feder...
In both corporate and banking law, firms are empowered to select from a limited menu of options the ...
Any substantial inquiry into the functioning of the insurance commissioner in American society poses...
This Article presents both historical and empirical evidence to support the view that the Supreme Co...
So for more than six decades, the insurance industry has operated largely beyond the reach of federa...
Correspondence issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "This let...
Since 1945, the McCarran-Ferguson Act (MFA) has shielded the “business of insurance” from antitrust ...
For over a century, there has been a continuing controversy concerning state versus federal regulati...
In health care, the increase in market concentration on both the insurer side and the provider side ...