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Antitrust and Trade Regulation

Selected Works

William H. Page

Selected Works

2014

United States v. Microsoft Corp.

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Who Suffered Antitrust Injury In The Microsoft Case?, John E. Lopatka, William H. Page Nov 2014

Who Suffered Antitrust Injury In The Microsoft Case?, John E. Lopatka, William H. Page

William H. Page

Most of the popular and scholarly discussions of Microsoft have focused on whether the defendant violated the law and, if so, whether the remedial order was appropriate. Never far from the surface in all of these discussions, however, has been the prospect of private antitrust suits that would inevitably follow a government victory. Indeed, numerous consumer class actions were filed against Microsoft in the wake of the District Court's issuance of its findings of fact. Should the District Court's decisions on liability stand, Microsoft can expect to face other suits by a variety of actors, including competitors, original equipment manufacturers …


Monopolization, Innovation, And Consumer Welfare, John Lopatka, William Page Nov 2014

Monopolization, Innovation, And Consumer Welfare, John Lopatka, William Page

William H. Page

While most commentators and the enforcement agencies voice support for the consumer welfare standard, substantial disagreement exists over when economic theory justifies a presumption of consumer injury. Virtually all would subscribe to the theoretical prediction that an effective cartel will likely inflict consumer injury by reducing output and thus increasing prices. But the academic and judicial consensus disappears when the theory at issue predicts that a practice -- a merger or a predatory pricing campaign, for example -- will harm consumers in the future through some complex sequence of events.

In our view, the desire to protect innovation is legitimate, …