Antitrust, a timely and succinct study guide, features:
- a two-pronged approach to describing the economics of antitrust law
- an intuitive, non-quantitative introduction, followed by
- traditional and quantitative economic analysis
- a consistent emphasis on real-world business transactions for example, the book gives extensive, accessible background material to put things like mergers and acquisitions, marketing, and product distribution into real-world context
- comprehensive coverage
- the Sherman and Clayton Acts
- the Robinson-Patman Act
- merger review under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act
- procedural and institutional complexities of antitrust law
- antitrust law vis-a-vis innovation and intellectual property
- the scope of antitrust law, including comprehensive coverage of the many antitrust immunities and exemptions
- systematic organization, from the most general to the most specific
- advanced topics such as oligopoly theory, monopolistic competition, and product distribution