Antitrust Antitrust

Antitrust - Definition and Overview

Antitrust is also the name for a movie, see Antitrust (movie)

Antitrust or competition laws legislate against trade practices that undermine competitiveness or are considered to be unfair. The term antitrust derives from the U.S. law that was originally formulated to combat business trusts - now commonly known as cartels.

Contents

Criticism of antitrust laws

Nobel economist Milton Friedman believes says that antitrust laws "do far more harm than good" and that therefore they should not exist. Milton Friedman is an advocate of free markets.

Divisions

Most antitrust activity can be classified in the following areas:

Laws

Alabama became the first U.S. state to enact an antitrust law on February 23, 1883.

Most free-market countries have an antitrust law of one form or another. The European Union has its own competition law.

See also

External links

Example Usage of Antitrust

goonanism: Can someone please tell me if there are Antitrust implications for the Rupert/Microsoft Alliance? http://bit.ly/8WtQL8
MISaustralia: Euro regulator extends Oracle Antitrust deadline. http://bit.ly/7UgNer
dineshvalmiki: #Apple agreed to turn over #iPhone source code in Antitrust lawsuit, but then reneged, plaintiffs sayhttp://bit.ly/8kVzv1
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