Date: 2019
Type: Article
The common ownership boom – or : how I learned to start worrying and love antitrust
CPI Antitrust chronicle, 2019, OnlineOnly
TZANAKI, Anna, The common ownership boom – or : how I learned to start worrying and love antitrust, CPI Antitrust chronicle, 2019, OnlineOnly
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/63064
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Is common ownership the Doomsday Machine for the operation of free markets, competition and capitalism as we know it? An observer of cutting-edge law and economics literature may indeed tend to believe that we are approaching a point of ultimate antitrust apocalypse. This article tries to unfold the ongoing antitrust-focused debate by exploring a series of questions: (i) who is a common owner; (ii) what are the negative externalities of common ownership; (iii) which are the potential anticompetitive mechanisms and theories of harm; (iv) what are the appropriate legal solutions to any competition concerns. While there is so much we do not know, common ownership forces us, with some urgency, to revisit and review whether our existing antitrust tools, methods and policies are well fit for purpose.
Additional information:
Published online 21 May 2019
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/63064
ISSN: 2168-1155
External link: https://www.competitionpolicyinternational.com/antitrust-chronicle-common-ownership-revisited/
Publisher: Competition Policy International (CPI)