Monopoly and Monopolization - Fundamental But Separate Concepts in U.S. Antitrust Law Metadata
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Title
- Main Title Monopoly and Monopolization - Fundamental But Separate Concepts in U.S. Antitrust Law
Creator
-
Author: Rubin, Janice E.Creator Type: PersonalCreator Info: Legislative Attorney
Publisher
-
Name: Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service.Place of Publication: Washington D.C.
Date
- Creation: 1999-06-28
Language
- English
Description
- Content Description: This report illustrates the difference between the concepts of “monopoly” and “monopolization” by touching on the monopoly/monopolization thinking in the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), as illustrated in (1) statements on merger enforcement made by recent antitrust enforcement officials (generally indicative of the agencies’ concerns about competitive conditions and the effect of various market transactions), (2) the 1992 Horizontal Merger Guidelines 2 and (3) some observations on the Government actions against the Microsoft and Intel Corporations.
- Physical Description: 5 pages.
Subject
- Legislative Indexing Vocabulary: Business
- Legislative Indexing Vocabulary: Monopolies
- Legislative Indexing Vocabulary: Antitrust law
- Legislative Indexing Vocabulary: Law
Coverage
- Place Name: United States
Collection
-
Name: Congressional Research Service ReportsCode: CRSR
Institution
-
Name: UNT Libraries Government Documents DepartmentCode: UNTGD
Resource Type
- Report
Format
- Text
Identifier
- CRS Report Number: RS20241
- Accession or Local Control No: RS20241_1999Jun28
- Archival Resource Key: ark:/67531/metacrs893