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Predatory pricing in antitrust law and economics : a historical perspective / Nicola Giocoli.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: The economics of legal relationships ; 20Publication details: New York, Routledge, 2014, Description: xiii, 323 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780415822527
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.523 GIO.P
Contents:
The economics of predatory pricing -- The two freedoms and British Common Law -- American economists and destructive competition -- Predatory pricing in the formative era of antitrust law -- Predatory pricing in the structuralist era -- The Chicago School and the irrelevance of predation -- Harvard rules : Areeda and Turner's solution -- The demise of predatory pricing as an antitrust violation.
Summary: "Can a price ever be too low? Can competition ever be ruinous? Questions like these have always accompanied American antitrust law. They testify to the difficulty of antitrust enforcement, of protecting competition without protecting competitors. As the business practice that most directly raises these kinds of questions, predatory pricing is at the core of antitrust debates. The history of its law and economics offers a privileged standpoint for assessing the broader development of antitrust, its past, present and future. In contrast to existing literature, this book adopts the perspective of the history of economic thought to tell this history, covering a period from the late 1880s to present times.The image of a big firm, such as Rockefeller's Standard Oil or Duke's American Tobacco, crushing its small rivals by underselling them is iconic in American antitrust culture. It is no surprise that the most brilliant legal and economic minds of the last 130 years have been engaged in solving the predatory pricing puzzle. The book shows economic theories that build rigorous stories explaining when predatory pricing may be rational, what welfare harm it may cause, and how the law may fight it. Among these narratives, a special place belongs to the Chicago story, according to which predatory pricing is never profitable and every low price is always a good price.Nicola Giocoli is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Pisa, Italy. "--
List(s) this item appears in: Economics Books, SLSN | Antitrust Books
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Symbiosis Law School, Noida Reference 338.523 GIO.P (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not For Loan SLSN-B-7315

Includes bibliographical references (pages 292-304) and index.

The economics of predatory pricing -- The two freedoms and British Common Law -- American economists and destructive competition -- Predatory pricing in the formative era of antitrust law -- Predatory pricing in the structuralist era -- The Chicago School and the irrelevance of predation -- Harvard rules : Areeda and Turner's solution -- The demise of predatory pricing as an antitrust violation.

"Can a price ever be too low? Can competition ever be ruinous? Questions like these have always accompanied American antitrust law. They testify to the difficulty of antitrust enforcement, of protecting competition without protecting competitors. As the business practice that most directly raises these kinds of questions, predatory pricing is at the core of antitrust debates. The history of its law and economics offers a privileged standpoint for assessing the broader development of antitrust, its past, present and future. In contrast to existing literature, this book adopts the perspective of the history of economic thought to tell this history, covering a period from the late 1880s to present times.The image of a big firm, such as Rockefeller's Standard Oil or Duke's American Tobacco, crushing its small rivals by underselling them is iconic in American antitrust culture. It is no surprise that the most brilliant legal and economic minds of the last 130 years have been engaged in solving the predatory pricing puzzle. The book shows economic theories that build rigorous stories explaining when predatory pricing may be rational, what welfare harm it may cause, and how the law may fight it. Among these narratives, a special place belongs to the Chicago story, according to which predatory pricing is never profitable and every low price is always a good price.Nicola Giocoli is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Pisa, Italy. "--

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