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Antitrust laws - Definition |
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- 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.
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
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Example Usage of Antitrust |
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Token12ga: @litzz11 I'm not gonna kid you, the Antitrust exemption is only one of a dozen things that bug me, I feel we showed our hand way to soon. |
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FortWorthCP: Fort Worth: Justice Department wants conditions on Antitrust immunity for American, British Airways http://bit.ly/7lKJws |
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Litzz11: @Token12ga Heck no one is HAPPY about it but bottom line is this is it. No "fix"-stuff like Antitrust exemption won't likely B fixed either. |
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