The goal of antitrust advocates is to increase the role of competition, assure that competition works in the interests of consumers, and challenge abuses of concentrated economic power in the American and world economy. Antitrust policies were first enacted during the great robber baron era of American economic history. Men such as Rockefeller and Carnegie were forced to split up their companies that monopolised the oil and steel industries of America. Ever since that time antitrust policies have worked to avoid similar situations. These policies cannot always be effective because of developing circumstances. This book presents studies of different antitrust policies and how they adapt to a rapidly changing economic landscape.
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Table Of Contents:
Preface; General Overview of the United States Antitrust Law; Price-Concentration Studies: There you go Again; "Price Gouging", the Antitrust Laws and Vertical Integration: How they are Related; Legal Fit of "The Microsoft Problem": Antitrust or Copyright?; Merger and Antitrust Issues in Agriculture; Antitrust Primer for Federal Law Enforcement Personn Competing Ways Towards International Antitrust: The WTO versus the ICN; Antitrust in Ukraine; Event Studies for Merger Analysis: An Evaluation of the Effects of Non-Normality on Hypothesis Testing; Strategic Bundling in Telecommunications and its Antitrust Implications for Intermodal Competition; Index.