Abolition of Antitrust by Gary Hull, Paperback, 9781412805025 | Buy online at The Nile
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Abolition of Antitrust

Author: Gary Hull  

Paperback

Asserts that antitrust laws - on economic, legal, and moral grounds - are bad, and provides evidence supporting arguments for their total abolition. The authors look at some cases as well as the Antitrust Act and conclude that they are based on an erroneous interpretation of the history of American business, premised on bad economics.

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Summary

Asserts that antitrust laws - on economic, legal, and moral grounds - are bad, and provides evidence supporting arguments for their total abolition. The authors look at some cases as well as the Antitrust Act and conclude that they are based on an erroneous interpretation of the history of American business, premised on bad economics.

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Description

The Abolition of Antitrust asserts that antitrust laws - on economic, legal, and moral grounds - are bad, and provides evidence supporting arguments for their total abolition.

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Critic Reviews

-The essays in this book present a sustained economic, historical, moral, and legal broadside against the various federal statutes known as antitrust doctrine. They explode the cherished myths underlying the antitrust laws, and expose their intellectual fountainhead in a morality of self-sacrifice that is incompatible with individual rights, free enterprise, and objective law. With the publication of this text, businessmen, lawyers, economists, policy makers, legislators, and judges finally have access to a systemic critique of the antitrust laws. From here on, if antitrust continues to violate the rights of businessmen and to ravage the American economy, it is not for lack of knowing how and why.-

--Adam Mossoff, Assistant Professor of Law, Michigan State University


"The essays in this book present a sustained economic, historical, moral, and legal broadside against the various federal statutes known as antitrust doctrine. They explode the cherished myths underlying the antitrust laws, and expose their intellectual fountainhead in a morality of self-sacrifice that is incompatible with individual rights, free enterprise, and objective law. With the publication of this text, businessmen, lawyers, economists, policy makers, legislators, and judges finally have access to a systemic critique of the antitrust laws. From here on, if antitrust continues to violate the rights of businessmen and to ravage the American economy, it is not for lack of knowing how and why."

--Adam Mossoff, Assistant Professor of Law, Michigan State University


"The essays in this book present a sustained economic, historical, moral, and legal broadside against the various federal statutes known as antitrust doctrine. They explode the cherished myths underlying the antitrust laws, and expose their intellectual fountainhead in a morality of self-sacrifice that is incompatible with individual rights, free enterprise, and objective law. With the publication of this text, businessmen, lawyers, economists, policy makers, legislators, and judges finally have access to a systemic critique of the antitrust laws. From here on, if antitrust continues to violate the rights of businessmen and to ravage the American economy, it is not for lack of knowing how and why."

--Adam Mossoff, Assistant Professor of Law, Michigan State University

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About the Author

Gary Hull is director of the Program on Values and Ethics in the Marketplace (VEM) at Duke University, and has taught philosophy and business ethics at the Fuqua School of Business, Whittier College, and the Claremont Graduate School. He is coeditor of The Ayn Rand Reader.

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More on this Book

The Abolition of Antitrust asserts that antitrust laws--on economic, legal, and moral grounds--are bad, and provides convincing evidence supporting arguments for their total abolition. Every year, new antitrust prosecutions arise in the U.S. courts; Gary Hull and the contributing authors look at some of these cases--as well as the very Antitrust Act itself--and conclude that they are based on an erroneous interpretation of the history of American business, premised on bad economics. For Hull, antitrust prosecutions are based on a horrible moral inversion: that it is acceptable to sacrifice America's best producers. The contributors explain how key antitrust ideas, for instance, "monopoly," restraint of trade," and "anticompetitive behavior," have been used to justify prosecution, and then make clear why those ideas are false. They sketch the historical, legal, economic, and moral reasoning that gave rise to the passage and growth of antitrust legislation. This dynamic and accessible work, now available in paperback, is not simply a polemical argument for a particular policy position. On publication, Adam Mossof at Michigan State University commented, "The essays in this book present a sustained economic, historical, moral, and legal broadside against the various federal statutes known as antitrust doctrine. They explode the cherished myths underling the antitrust laws, and expose their intellectual fountainhead in a morality of self-sacrifice that is incompatible with individual rights, free enterprise, and objective law. With the publication of this text, businessmen, lawyers, economists, policymakers, legislators, and judges finally have access to a systemic critique of the antitrustlaws. From here on, if antitrust continues to violate the rights of businessmen and to ravage the American economy, it is not for lack of knowing how and why."

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Product Details

Publisher
Taylor & Francis Inc | Routledge
Published
30th June 2005
Pages
188
ISBN
9781412805025

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