Examples of Antitrust in the following topics:
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- Antitrust laws ensure that competitive environments are preserved in order to maintain an efficient and equitable capitalistic system.
- While these antitrust laws differ from nation to nation, they can loosely be summarized in three components:
- United States (U.S.) - In the U.S., antitrust policy finds its roots in 1890 with the Sherman Antitrust Act.
- This act was expanded upon in 1914, with two more competitive laws: The Clayton Antitrust Act and the Federal Trade Commission Act.
- Discuss antitrust laws aimed to improve competition and prevent monopolies from becoming more powerful
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- In 1914, Congress passed two more laws designed to bolster the Sherman Antitrust Act: the Clayton Antitrust Act and the Federal Trade Commission Act.
- The Clayton Antitrust Act defined more clearly what constituted illegal restraint of trade.
- The government has continued to pursue antitrust prosecutions since World War II.
- As these examples demonstrate, it is not always easy to define when a violation of antitrust laws occurs.
- What's more, conditions change, and corporate arrangements that appear to pose antitrust threats in one era may appear less threatening in another.
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- Such concerns gave rise to two major laws aimed at taking apart or preventing monopolies: the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 and the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914.
- In general, government antitrust officials see a threat of monopoly power when a company gains control of 30 percent of the market for a commodity or service.
- While antitrust laws may have increased competition, they have not kept U.S. companies from getting bigger.
- That represented one of the largest divestitures ever mandated by antitrust agencies.
- But federal antitrust agencies have given their blessings to some joint ventures they believe will yield benefits.
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- First, price-fixing is illegal in the United States, and antitrust laws exist to prevent collusion between firms.
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- Monopolies on the whole are governed under antitrust laws, both on a national level in most countries and on an international level via institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO).
- Antitrust laws and the careful control of mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures, and other strategic alliances are critical in the regulation of natural monopolies.
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- Antitrust: Previously, insurance companies were immune to antitrust laws.
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- Congress enacted a law regulating railroads in 1887 (the Interstate Commerce Act), and one preventing large firms from controlling a single industry in 1890 (the Sherman Antitrust Act).
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- While antitrust law may have been intended to increase competition, much other regulation had the opposite effect.
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- Another form of economic regulation, antitrust law, seeks to strengthen market forces so that direct regulation is unnecessary.
- The government -- and, sometimes, private parties -- have used antitrust law to prohibit practices or mergers that would unduly limit competition.
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- It regulates "natural monopolies," for example, and it uses antitrust laws to control or break up other business combinations that become so powerful that they can surmount market forces.