Monopoly in Economics and LawBloomsbury Academic, 14 mai 1976 - 340 pages This book examines economic analysis relevant to monopoly policy and traces the growth of monopoly policy in the U.S. from its common-law origins to the present as it relates to cartels, market tactics, oligopoly, and labor unions. |
Table des matières
MONOPOLY AS A POLICY PROBLEM | 1 |
THE THEORY OF CARTELS | 7 |
THE INFERENCES FROM CARTEL THEORY | 18 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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agreement Alcoa American antitrust agencies antitrust laws antitrust policy assets capital cartel cent Clayton Act combination commerce common law Company competitors conspiracy consumer Corporate Revolution criminal decision decree defendant dissolution divestiture Econ economic economists efficient elimination employers enforcement evidence Federal Trade Commission hence Ibid imperfect competition increase indictment industry's interest involving judges Justice Department labor unions large firm legislation mainly major manufacturing marginal cost marginal revenue market power ment mergers monopolist monopoly power monopsony oligopoly parties patent plaintiff plant pooling price discrimination probably problem profit promoters Pullman railroads rate of output reason reported resale price maintenance restraint of trade Restrictive Practices Robinson-Patman Robinson-Patman Act rule secondary boycott selling Sherman Act small firms Standard Oil Stat steel suit Supreme Court tion total average cost trade associations transport cost trust busting tying contracts unfair unlawful violation wage workable competition workers