Molting Time for Antitrust: Market Realities, Economic Fallacies, and European Innovations

Molting Time for Antitrust: Market Realities, Economic Fallacies, and European Innovations

by Dudley H Chapman
Molting Time for Antitrust: Market Realities, Economic Fallacies, and European Innovations

Molting Time for Antitrust: Market Realities, Economic Fallacies, and European Innovations

by Dudley H Chapman

Hardcover

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Overview

While the purpose of antitrust policy is to protect competition, competition that removes all restraints may defeat its own goal. Dudley H. Chapman, in a revisionist analysis of antitrust history and policy, argues that our country needs practical government policy to replace our doctrinaire and unrealistic antitrust rules. The Chicago School and the economic theory on which it is based are rejected as an intellectual scandal. Competition is an end in itself and it is not the primary purpose of anti-trust to lower consumer prices. Chapman, a former antitrust official, uses historical materials to build his case for a new and practical antitrust policy. He proposes that we look not to Chicago but to Europe for our model.

Compared to their older, more rigid U.S. counterparts, European laws are far more rationally conceived and realistic, Chapman says. Europeans believe that some restraints on competitive freedom, both private and government, are necessary to preserve the ongoing competitive process. The book develops the thesis that for current U.S. policy to mature or molt its rigid shell we need to remove criminal penalties and prohibit abuses of market-dominating positions. Anyone in the U.S. or Europe who is active in antitrust and related issues of regulatory and trade policy—lawyers, economists, government officials in the executive branch and in Congress, academicians and students—will find in this book an important and controversial agenda.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275934781
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/30/1991
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)
Lexile: 1370L (what's this?)

About the Author

DUDLEY H. CHAPMAN has served in the Office of Legal Counsel in the Department of Justice, on a Cabinet-level task force on Oil Import Control, and as assistant chief of the Foreign Commerce Section in the Antitrust Division. Before going into private law practice he served in the White House Office of the Counsel to the President.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Preface
Introduction
Origins of the Sherman Act
The Saga of Standard Oil
The Legislative Odyssey of the Sherman Act
Antitrust as Economic Policy
The Theology of Antitrust: Fanciful Teachings of Economic Theory
Flaws in the Price Theory
Dissatisfaction with the Market
Reflections from Abroad
The Elements of a Competitive Policy
Epilogue: A Final Consultation with our Friendly Cynic
Bibliography
Index

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