Antitrust
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- Antitrust is also the name for a movie, see Antitrust (movie)
Antitrust or competition laws, legislate against trade practices that undermine competitiveness or are considered to be unfair. The term antitrust derives from the U.S. law that was originally formulated to combat business trusts - now commonly known as cartels.
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Divisions
Most antitrust activity can be classified in the following areas:
- Bid rigging
- Monopolization and oligopolization
- Price fixing
- Tying
- Vendor lock-in
- Business
- Competition
Laws
Alabama became the first U.S. state to enact an antitrust law on February 23, 1883.
Most free-market countries have an antitrust law of one form or another. The European Union has its own competition law.
Arguments in favor of antitrust laws
Criticisms of antitrust
Monopolistic firms are commonly said to be in a privileged position to reap economic benefits by restricting output and raising prices, without fear of competition. However, Thomas Woods asserts that the industries most frequently accused of holding a monopolistic position in the late nineteenth century were neither restricting output nor raising prices.
The Results of "Predatory Pricing": Commodity Prices from 1880-1890
Steel | ↓58% |
Zinc | ↓20% |
Sugar | ↓22% |
During the 1880s output of monopolistic industries grew seven times faster than the overall economy, while prices in these industries were generally falling—even faster than the 7% rate of decline that occurred in the economy as a whole. Template:Ref
Nobel economist Milton Friedman said, "When I started in this business, as a believer in competition, I was a great supporter of antitrust laws; I thought enforcing them was one of the few desirable things that the government could do to promote more competition. But as I watched what actually happened, I saw that, instead of promoting competition, antitrust laws tended to do exactly the opposite, because they tended, like so many government activities, to be taken over by the people they were supposed to regulate and control. And so over time I have gradually come to the conclusion that antitrust laws do far more harm than good and that we would be better off if we didn’t have them at all, if we could get rid of them. But we do have them." Template:Ref
See also
- AFL-NFL Merger
- Clayton Antitrust Act
- Commissioner Andrew L. Harris
- Common law
- Competition policy
- Corporate Governance
- Corporatism
- Corporatocracy
- Duopoly
- Federal Trade Commission Act
- Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act
- History of the United States (1865-1918)
- Limit price
- List of economics topics
- Market anomaly
- Monopoly
- Monopsony
- President William McKinley
- President Theodore Roosevelt
- Robinson-Patman Act
- Senator John Sherman
- Sherman Antitrust Act
- State law
- Trust
- Trust-busting
- U.S. Industrial Commission of 1898
- United States v. Continental Can Co.
- United States v. E. C. Knight Co.
- United States v. Microsoft
External links
- Antitrust Law (http://ww3.definitions-legal.com:8567/antitrust-law.htm) -- Articles & Definitions
- http://www.wa.gov/ago/trust
- An article called Antitrust Laws Should Be Abolished (http://www.quebecoislibre.org/000219-13.htm)
- Criticism of Antitrust by Alan Greenspan (http://www.polyconomics.com/searchbase/06-12-98.html)
References
- Template:Note Thomas E. Woods, Jr., Ph.D (2004). The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, 99.
- Template:Note The Business Community's Suicidal Impulse by Milton Friedman (http://www.cato.org/pubs/policy_report/v21n2/friedman.html) A criticism of antitrust laws and cases by the Nobel economistja:反トラスト法