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  • Antitrust and Competition
    • Money in Politics
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    • Economic History
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PROMARKET
  • Antitrust and Competition
    • Money in Politics
    • Regulatory Capture
    • Rent seeking
    • Income Inequality
  • Big Tech
  • Economic History
    • Economic History
  • Research
  • Commentary
  • About
    • Masthead and contacts
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Reading ListWhat we are reading

Selling to Yourself: the Private Equity Groups That Buy Companies They Own

By ProMarket writers
June 21, 2022
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    ProMarket writers

    Popular This Week

    Antitrust and Competition

    The Impact of Algorithms on Competition and Competition Law

    Antonio Capobianco
    Antonio Capobianco, the deputy head of the OECD Competition Division and one of the authors of the 2023 OECD report on algorithmic competition and collusion, explains the risks that algorithms and artificial intelligence pose to competition and how regulators can approach the changing competition paradigm.
    Read more
    Antitrust and Competition

    Rivals’ Exit Should Be Incorporated into the Guidelines for Vertical Merger Evaluation

    Javier D. Donna, Pedro Pereira
    An exit-inducing vertical merger might reduce welfare even if it is a welfare-enhancing vertical merger absent exit. Therefore, the possibility for rivals’ exit should be incorporated into the guidelines for vertical merger evaluation, write Javier D. Donna and Pedro Pereira in new research.
    Read more
    Book Excerpts

    The Chicago Boys and the Chilean Neoliberal Project

    Sebastian Edwards
    In a new book, The Chile Project: The Story of the Chicago Boys and the Downfall of Neoliberalism, Sebastian Edwards details the history of neoliberalism in Chile over the past seventy years. The Chicago Boys—a group of Chilean economists trained at the University of Chicago through the U.S. State Department’s “Chile Project”—played a central role in neoliberalism’s ascent during General Augusto Pinochet’s rule. What follows is an excerpt from the book on University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman’s 1975 visit to Chile to meet with Pinochet and business leaders.
    Read more
    Democracy

    Getting Partisans To Listen to One Another Can Reduce Political Polarization

    Guglielmo Briscese, Michèle Belot
    In new research, Guglielmo Briscese and Michèle Belot find that reminding Americans of shared values can open lines of communication and help reduce political polarization.
    Read more

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      Book Excerpts

      The Chicago Boys and the Chilean Neoliberal Project

      Sebastian Edwards
      In a new book, The Chile Project: The Story of the Chicago Boys and the Downfall of Neoliberalism, Sebastian Edwards details the history of neoliberalism in Chile over the past seventy years. The Chicago Boys—a group of Chilean economists trained at the University of Chicago through the U.S. State Department’s “Chile Project”—played a central role in neoliberalism’s ascent during General Augusto Pinochet’s rule. What follows is an excerpt from the book on University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman’s 1975 visit to Chile to meet with Pinochet and business leaders.
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      Creating a Modern Antitrust Welfare Standard that Integrates Post-Chicago and Neo-Brandeisian Goals

      Darren Bush, Mark Glick, Gabriel A. Lozada
      Darren Bush, Mark Glick, and Gabriel A. Lozada argue that the Consumer Welfare Standard  is inconsistent with modern welfare economics and that a modern approach to antitrust could integrate traditional Congressional goals as advocated by the Neo-Brandesians. Such an approach could be the basis for an alliance between the post-Chicago economists and the Neo-Brandesians.
      Read more
      Democracy

      Getting Partisans To Listen to One Another Can Reduce Political Polarization

      Guglielmo Briscese, Michèle Belot
      In new research, Guglielmo Briscese and Michèle Belot find that reminding Americans of shared values can open lines of communication and help reduce political polarization.
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      The State of The Debate on U.S. Antitrust and Competition

      Brooke Fox
      This year’s Stigler Center conference on antitrust and competition invited scholars to propose alternatives to the consumer welfare standard.
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      The Impact of Algorithms on Competition and Competition Law

      Antonio Capobianco
      Antonio Capobianco, the deputy head of the OECD Competition Division and one of the authors of the 2023 OECD report on algorithmic competition and collusion, explains the risks that algorithms and artificial intelligence pose to competition and how regulators can approach the changing competition paradigm.
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      Rivals’ Exit Should Be Incorporated into the Guidelines for Vertical Merger Evaluation

      Javier D. Donna, Pedro Pereira
      An exit-inducing vertical merger might reduce welfare even if it is a welfare-enhancing vertical merger absent exit. Therefore, the possibility for rivals’ exit should be incorporated into the guidelines for vertical merger evaluation, write Javier D. Donna and Pedro Pereira in new research.
      Read more
      Book Excerpts

      The Business of Colonialism

      Philip Stern
      In his new book, Empire Incorporated, Philip Stern argues that corporations drove the global expansion of the British Empire rather than provide...
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      There Is No Antitrust Exception To Rules Of Statutory Interpretation

      Tim Wu
      Tim Wu responds to a recent ProMarket post by Herbert Hovenkamp which argues for the dismissal of the Supreme Court’s 1962 Brown Shoe decision. Wu says that the Court’s duty is to obey and interpret the intentions of laws set by Congress, and cases cannot be dismissed because they don’t align with a particular policy perspective.
      Read more
      Big Tech

      How Big Tech Uses Net Neutrality To Subvert Competition

      Roslyn Layton
      A decade of evidence suggests that Open Internet policies have delivered the opposite effect.
      Read more
      Antitrust and Competition

      The Convergence of Antitrust Thought in the Late 1930s and Its Subsequent Collapse

      Thierry Kirat, Frédéric Marty
      In their research, published in History of Economic Ideas, Thierry Kirat and Frédéric Marty stress the importance of the late 1930s in the making of antitrust. The moment was exceptional for its consensus within the economic discipline and the implementation of voluntarist public enforcement, particularly under Thurman Arnold according to the prescriptions of the Second Chicago School, institutionalists, and the preferences of the Neo-Brandeis movement.
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      PROMARKET

      ProMarket is dedicated to discussing how competition tends to be subverted by special interests. The posts represent the opinions of their writers, not necessarily those of the University of Chicago, the Booth School of Business, or its faculty. For more information, please visit ProMarket Policy.

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