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Law and Economics

2013

Antitrust

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Exclusion As A Core Competition Concern, Jonathan Baker Jan 2013

Exclusion As A Core Competition Concern, Jonathan Baker

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

A contemporary consensus in antitrust discourse inappropriately places exclusionary conduct at the periphery of competition policy, while putting collusion at the core. Contrary to that common view, exclusion is as important as collusion as a matter of precedent, the structure of doctrinal rules, economics, and sound competition policy. Courts treat exclusionary violations as serious competitive problems. An emerging doctrinal rule for truncated condemnation of “plain” exclusionary conduct (practices foreclosing rivals that lack a plausible efficiency justification) parallels the evolving judicial approach toward “naked” collusion. Exclusion and collusion can be understood within a common economic framework that emphasizes the close relationship …


Economics And Politics: Perspectives On The Goals And Future Of Antitrust, Jonathan Baker Jan 2013

Economics And Politics: Perspectives On The Goals And Future Of Antitrust, Jonathan Baker

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

This article examines the roles of economics and politics in U.S. antitrust from several perspectives. It explains why the modern debate over the economic welfare standard that enforcers and courts should pursue is unsatisfying. It connects economics and politics by describing antitrust’s economic goals as the product of a mid-20th century political understanding about the nature of economic regulation that has continued in force to this day. To protect that understanding, it explains, antitrust rules should now be implemented using a qualified consumer welfare standard. The article also identifies contemporary political tensions that threaten to create regulatory gridlock, or even …