The antitrust paradigm : restoring a competitive economy / Jonathan B. Baker.
2019
KF1649 .B352 2019 (Mapit)
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Author
Title
The antitrust paradigm : restoring a competitive economy / Jonathan B. Baker.
Imprint
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2019.
Copyright
©2019
Description
349 pages ; 25 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Part I. The market power paroxysm and the antitrust paradigm. Market power in an era of antitrust
The faltering political consensus supporting antitrust
Preventing the political misuse of antitrust
Recalibrating error costs and presumptions
Erroneous arguments against enforcement
Part II. Antitrust rules and the information economy. Inferring agreement and algorithmic coordination
Exclusionary conduct by dominant platforms
Threats to innovation from lessened competition
Harm to suppliers, workers, and platform users
Part III. Looking forward. Restoring a competitive economy.
The faltering political consensus supporting antitrust
Preventing the political misuse of antitrust
Recalibrating error costs and presumptions
Erroneous arguments against enforcement
Part II. Antitrust rules and the information economy. Inferring agreement and algorithmic coordination
Exclusionary conduct by dominant platforms
Threats to innovation from lessened competition
Harm to suppliers, workers, and platform users
Part III. Looking forward. Restoring a competitive economy.
Summary
In the 1970s, when the United States economy was struggling and the term "stagflation" was coined to capture inflation plus stagnant business growth, the "Chicago school" critique of antitrust rules gained ascendance. In the 1980s, during Ronald Reagan's two terms as president, that critique's policy prescriptions-the eliminating of or modifying anticompetitive rules to make them less restrictive-became common practice. As Jonathan Baker writes, "The Chicago approach to antitrust can be understood as a gamble. More relaxed antitrust rules would allow firms to achieve greater efficiencies, which would more than compensate for any risk of firms exercising market power. Put differently, the Chicagoans bet that antitrust reform could achieve long term consumer welfare gains without facilitating the creation of substantial and durable market power." The Antitrust Paradigm presents a wealth of evidence arguing that the Chicagoans lost their bet, and prescribes what should be done about it. Since the 1980s, not only has market power widened, economic productivity decline, and consumer welfare gains been modest at best, but also the economy has changed, most visibly in the information technology and Internet giants that top the financial market's valuation charts. Baker argues that both the failures of antitrust reform and the changed economy demand a new antitrust paradigm, one that restores a competitive economy through strengthened antitrust, recognizes antitrust's political context, and identifies the competitive harms from dominant information technology platforms. His book frames the problem, examines the distinctive competitive problems of the information economy, and concludes with a guide for restoring effective antitrust policies.-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Call Number
KF1649 .B352 2019
Language
English
ISBN
9780674975781 hardcover ; alkaline paper
0674975782 hardcover ; alkaline paper
0674975782 hardcover ; alkaline paper
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