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Full-Text Articles in Law
Are Antitrust "Treble" Damages Really Single Damages?, Robert H. Lande
Are Antitrust "Treble" Damages Really Single Damages?, Robert H. Lande
All Faculty Scholarship
This Article will show that antitrust violations do not actually give rise to "treble" damages. When viewed correctly, antitrust damages awards are approximately equal to, or are in fact less than, the actual damages caused by antitrust violations.
The article demonstrates this by analyzing the relatively quantifiable harms from antitrust violations, modeling the issues under both deterrence and compensation frameworks. It calculates rough estimates of those factors that affect the magnitude of the antitrust damages multiplier actually awarded. These adjustments to the "treble" damages multiplier arise from: (1) the lack of prejudgment interest; (2) the effects of the statute of …
Chicago Takes It On The Chin: Imperfect Information Could Play A Crucial Role In The Post-Kodak World, Robert H. Lande
Chicago Takes It On The Chin: Imperfect Information Could Play A Crucial Role In The Post-Kodak World, Robert H. Lande
All Faculty Scholarship
This article briefly describes the revolutionary potential of the Supreme Court's Kodak decision. It discusses the dramatic changes in antitrust that would occur if the field took concepts such as imperfect information, lock-in effects, strategic behavior, and other post-Chicago ideas seriously.
Among the effects of this decision could be:
(1) Imperfect information could substitute for traditional market share-based market power and reveal that a market that structurally appeared competitive in fact was behaving anticompetitively. Market share-based safe harbors are more likely to be inappropriate.
(2) This imperfect information-based market power also can lead to relatively direct harm to consumers by …
Understanding And Defending Against Medical Professional Peer Review Antitrust Claims, Daniel M. Warner
Understanding And Defending Against Medical Professional Peer Review Antitrust Claims, Daniel M. Warner
University of Baltimore Law Review
No abstract provided.