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Tying, Price Discrimination And Antitrust Policy, Herbert Hovenkamp
Tying, Price Discrimination And Antitrust Policy, Herbert Hovenkamp
Herbert Hovenkamp
ABSTRACT
A tying arrangement is a seller’s requirement that a customer may purchase its “tying” product only by taking its “tied” product. In a variable proportion tie the purchaser can vary her purchases of the tied product. For example, a customer might purchase a single printer, but either a contract or technological design requires her to purchase varying numbers of printer cartridges from the same manufacturer. Such arrangements are widely considered to be price discrimination devices, but their economic effects have been controversial.
Price discrimination comes in various “degrees.” In third degree price discrimination the seller isolates two or more …
Ip And Antitrust: Errands Into The Wilderness, Herbert Hovenkamp
Ip And Antitrust: Errands Into The Wilderness, Herbert Hovenkamp
Herbert Hovenkamp
IP AND ANTITRUST: ERRANDS INTO THE WILDERNESS
ABSTRACT
Antitrust and intellectual property law both seek to promote economic welfare by facilitating competition and investment in innovation. At various times both antitrust and IP law have wandered off this course and have become more driven by special interests. Today, antitrust and IP are on very different roads to reform. Antitrust began an Errand into the Wilderness in the late 1970s with a series of Supreme Court decisions that linked the plaintiff’s harm and right to obtain a remedy to the competition-furthering goals of antitrust policy. Today, patent law has begun its …
Neoclassicism And The Separation Of Ownership And Control, Herbert Hovenkamp
Neoclassicism And The Separation Of Ownership And Control, Herbert Hovenkamp
Herbert Hovenkamp
NEOCLASSICISM AND THE SEPARATION OF OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL Herbert Hovenkamp ABSTRACT The separation of ownership and control is a phrase that will forever be associated with Adolf A. Berle and Gardiner C. Means The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1932), as well as with Institutionalist economics, Legal Realism, and the New Deal. Neoclassical economists have generally been sharply critical, both of the historical facts that Berle and Means purported to describe and of the conclusions that they drew. In fact, however, the separation of ownership and control had already been an essential element of the neoclassical theory of corporate governance …