This article asserts a comprehensive response to Elhauge’s provocative arguments. With respect to tying, the article shows that governing Supreme Court precedent does not deem the non-foreclosure “power” effects of the practice to be anticompetitive and that those effects are unlikely to reduce social welfare in the long run, especially after accounting for dynamic efficiencies. With respect to bundled discounting, the article shows that Elhauge’s proposed liability rule is both inapposite to consumer harm and inadministrable and that both “linked” market foreclosure and a form of below-cost pricing are necessary for anticompetitive harm and should therefore be prerequisites to antitrust liability
This article identifies and critiques five attempts courts and commentators have made at articulatin...
This paper contributes to the recent debate, on the private enforcement of the antitrust laws and th...
Most courts and commentators agree that the ultimate goal of antitrust is efficiency. Accordingly, a...
This article asserts a comprehensive response to Elhauge’s provocative arguments. With respect to ty...
Current tying law uses a bifurcated rule of reason, condemning ties that have either tying market po...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
A tying arrangement is a seller’s requirement that a customer may purchase its “tying” product only ...
Notwithstanding hundreds of court decisions, tying arrangements remain enigmatic. Conclusions that g...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
The discounting practices of dominant firms has emerged as one of the most problematic areas of priv...
Since we abhor suspense, we will quickly answer the question our title poses: No. As a general matte...
Many tying arrangements are used by firms that do not have substantial market power in either of the...
The article begins with the premise that any failure to mitigate defense should aim to minimize the ...
There are two overarching legal paradigms for analyzing exclusionary conduct in antitrust – predator...
Recent decisions-all relying on a stylized example first provided by the Ortho court-hold that a mul...
This article identifies and critiques five attempts courts and commentators have made at articulatin...
This paper contributes to the recent debate, on the private enforcement of the antitrust laws and th...
Most courts and commentators agree that the ultimate goal of antitrust is efficiency. Accordingly, a...
This article asserts a comprehensive response to Elhauge’s provocative arguments. With respect to ty...
Current tying law uses a bifurcated rule of reason, condemning ties that have either tying market po...
This paper provides an overview of the law and the antitrust economics of tying. After describing th...
A tying arrangement is a seller’s requirement that a customer may purchase its “tying” product only ...
Notwithstanding hundreds of court decisions, tying arrangements remain enigmatic. Conclusions that g...
The Supreme Court\u27s treatment of tying arrangements has long been based on an economic theory tha...
The discounting practices of dominant firms has emerged as one of the most problematic areas of priv...
Since we abhor suspense, we will quickly answer the question our title poses: No. As a general matte...
Many tying arrangements are used by firms that do not have substantial market power in either of the...
The article begins with the premise that any failure to mitigate defense should aim to minimize the ...
There are two overarching legal paradigms for analyzing exclusionary conduct in antitrust – predator...
Recent decisions-all relying on a stylized example first provided by the Ortho court-hold that a mul...
This article identifies and critiques five attempts courts and commentators have made at articulatin...
This paper contributes to the recent debate, on the private enforcement of the antitrust laws and th...
Most courts and commentators agree that the ultimate goal of antitrust is efficiency. Accordingly, a...