Posted by Todd Zywicki:
My New Article on the Antitrust State Action Doctrine:

   I have another new article posted, this one on the antitrust state
   action doctrine, co-authored with a former colleague at the FTC, "The
   FTC and State Action: Evolving Views on the Proper Role of Government"
   which is available for download from [1]SSRN. It was written for the
   symposium on the 90th Anniversary of the Federal Trade Commission,
   which will be published later this year in the Antitrust Law Journal.

   Here's the abstract:

   Abstract: The state action doctrine was born in an era of exceptional
   confidence in government, with governmental entities widely regarded
   as unbiased and conscientious defenders of the public interest. Over
   time, however, more cautious and skeptical theories of government
   began to gain sway. In particular, the school of thought known as
   "public choice" - which holds that governmental entities, like private
   firms, will act in their economic self-interest - began to influence
   both legal theory and competition policy. Indeed, a close examination
   of recent state action case law suggests that public choice thinking
   has driven a slow, but consistent, evolution of the doctrine toward
   less deference to state regulators and more careful assessment of the
   actual incentives that drive their decision-making.

   This evolution in thinking, however, has not been accompanied by the
   development of a systematic, analytical framework to guide the
   application of the state action doctrine in particular cases.
   Developing such a framework should therefore remain a top priority of
   leading antitrust policymakers, including those at the Federal Trade
   Commission.

References

   1. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=695541

_______________________________________________
Volokh mailing list
[email protected]
http://highsorcery.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volokh

Reply via email to