The Lawful Acquisition and Exercise of Monopoly Power and its Implications for the Objectives of Antitrust

Competition Policy International, Vol. 4, No. 2, p. 203, 2008

47 Pages Posted: 30 Sep 2008 Last revised: 17 May 2009

See all articles by David S. Evans

David S. Evans

Market Platform Dynamics; Berkeley Research Group, LLC

Keith N. Hylton

Boston University - School of Law

Date Written: September 26, 2008

Abstract

The antitrust laws of the United States have, from their inception, allowed firms to acquire significant market power, to charge prices that reflect that market power, and to enjoy supra-competitive returns. This article shows that this policy, which was established by the U.S. Congress and affirmed repeatedly by the U.S. courts, reflects a tradeoff between the dynamic benefits that society realizes from allowing firms to secure significant rewards, including monopoly profits, from making risky investments and engaging in innovation; and the static costs that society incurs when firms with significant market power raise price and curtail output. That tradeoff results in antitrust laws that allow competition in the market and for the market, even if that rivalry results in a single firm emerging as a monopoly, but that prevent firms from engaging in practices that go out of bounds. The antitrust laws ultimately regulate the "boundaries" of the "game of competition." Three implications follow. First, the antitrust laws and intellectual property laws are based on similar policy tradeoffs between static and dynamic effects. Second, the antitrust rules have, all along, been based on this tradeoff and not on the effects of business practices on static consumer welfare in relevant antitrust markets. Third, one unintended consequence of the increased role of economics in antitrust analysis is to overemphasize static considerations which the almost the sole focus of the economics literature that courts and competition authorities consider.

Keywords: Antitust law, monopoly power, competition

JEL Classification: K21, L40

Suggested Citation

Evans, David S. and Hylton, Keith N., The Lawful Acquisition and Exercise of Monopoly Power and its Implications for the Objectives of Antitrust (September 26, 2008). Competition Policy International, Vol. 4, No. 2, p. 203, 2008, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1275431

David S. Evans (Contact Author)

Market Platform Dynamics ( email )

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Keith N. Hylton

Boston University - School of Law ( email )

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617-353-3077 (Fax)

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