Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Antitrust (1)
- Banks (1)
- Behavior (1)
- Brantley v. NBC Universal Inc. (1)
- Cable television (1)
-
- Cartels (1)
- Class actions (1)
- Competition (1)
- Consumer bias (1)
- Consumer interests (1)
- Context (1)
- Credit cards (1)
- Creditors (1)
- Decision making (1)
- Disclosure (1)
- Exclusion (1)
- Financial institutions (1)
- Individuals (1)
- Loans (1)
- Low-income households (1)
- Market power (1)
- Markets (1)
- Moderate-income households (1)
- Mortgage brokers (1)
- Mortgages (1)
- Regulation (1)
- Savings (1)
- Surplus (1)
- Tax credits (1)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law
Tying And Consumer Harm, Daniel A. Crane
Tying And Consumer Harm, Daniel A. Crane
Articles
Brantley raises important issues of law, economics, and policy about tying arrangements. Under current legal principles, Brantley was on solid ground in distinguishing between anticompetitive ties and those that might harm consumer interests without impairing competition. As a matter of economics, the court was also right to reject the claim that the cable programmers forced consumers to pay for programs the customers didn’t want. The hardest question is a policy one - whether antitrust law should ever condemn the exploitation of market power in ways that extract surplus from consumers but do not create or enlarge market power. I shall …
Behaviorally Informed Regulation, Michael S. Barr, Sendhil Mullainathan, Eldar Shafir
Behaviorally Informed Regulation, Michael S. Barr, Sendhil Mullainathan, Eldar Shafir
Book Chapters
Policy makers typically approach human behavior from the perspective of the rational agent model, which relics on normativc, a priori analyses. The model assumes people make insightful, well-planned, highly controlled, and calculated decisions guided by considerations of personal utility. This perspective is promoted in the social sciences and in professional schools and has come to dominate much of the formulation and conduct of policy. An alternative view, developed mostly through empirical behavioral research, and the one we will articulate here, provides a substantially difierent perspective on individual behavior and its policy and regulatory implications. According to the empirical perspective, behavior …