Search results for "jel:B13"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

John Bates Clark on trusts: New light from the Columbia archives

2005

Public concern over the so called “trust problem” in the United States between the end of the nineteenth century and 1914, the year of the passage of the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Acts, was reflected in the considerable contemporary literature on the subject. Not surprisingly, professional economists actively participated in this debate. Their thinking directly and indirectly influenced the legislation of 1914 in a way that cannot be said of the Sherman Act of 1890 (Mayhew 1998). A survey of the most important of these professional writings shows that, among the several voices animating the discussion, John Bates Clark's was perhaps the most influential. In this connection,…

Policy makingjel:B31General Arts and HumanitiesAntitrust Predatory pricing PredationSubject (philosophy)Public concernBATESjel:B13LegislationCommissionNewspaperHistory and Philosophy of ScienceLawEconomicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceExposition (narrative)
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The Influence of American Economists on the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission Acts

2011

The aim of this paper is to analyze American economists’ influence in the passing of the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission Acts (1914). Specifically, it is argued and documented that American economists were important in this process in two ways. Many economists exercised an “indirect” influence by discussing in academic journals and books problems concerning trusts, combinations, and the necessary measures to preserve the working of competitive markets. At least as importantly, if not more so, some economists took an active role in the reform movement both contributing to draft proposals for the amendment of existing antitrust legislation and providing help and advice during the Congres…

Antitrustjel:K21jel:L42Settore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero Economicojel:B13Clayton Actjel:B14Federal Trade Commissionjel:L41jel:B15
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