打破消费者福利监狱:解决最高法院未能保护竞争过程

Warren S. Grimes
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引用次数: 1

摘要

是时候把反垄断法从罗伯特·博克的消费者福利术语的枷锁中解放出来了。在过去的40多年里,博克的观点逐渐占据主导地位,尽管有所变化,但现在被广泛认为是核心的反垄断范式。在一篇配套文章中,我研究了为什么消费者福利标准不能维持这一作用。我提出了一个基于传统观点的对称福利标准,即《谢尔曼法》保护了竞争过程。在本文中,我将展开这一分析。消费者标签模式需要静态分析——只关注分销链一端的竞争效应。事实上,竞争是一个动态的、互动的过程,在这个过程中,产业链上各个层次的参与者都在增加价值,并影响彼此的选择。分销链上的所有参与者都受到竞争的约束——所有参与者都应该受到保护,免受基于权力的滥用竞争。我对为什么买卖双方的非价格和非效率偏好是竞争过程的关键部分,并且不能被消费者福利标准舒适地容纳,提供了扩展的分析。我列举了一些偏好的例子,这些偏好不仅体现在消费者身上,也体现在商品和服务分配的所有参与者身上,它们是竞争过程的核心。然后我研究最高法院的判决。最近的一些案例表明,政府执着于消费者福利标准,未能保护竞争。纠正反垄断这艘船需要接受一种基于传统的、对称的福利标准,平等地保护竞争体系中的所有参与者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Breaking Out of Consumer Welfare Jail: Addressing the Supreme Court's Failure to Protect the Competitive Process
It is time to free antitrust law from the yoke of Robert Bork’s consumer welfare terminology. Bork’s vision has gained ascendency over the past 40 plus years and, subject to variations, is now widely regarded as the core antitrust paradigm. In a companion article, I examined why a consumer welfare standard cannot sustain this role. I made the case for a symmetric welfare standard anchored to the traditional view that the Sherman Act protects the competitive process. In this article, I expand this analysis. A consumer-labelled paradigm invites a static analysis—one focused on competitive effects at only one end of the distribution chain. In fact, competition is a dynamic and interactive process in which players at all levels of the chain add value and affect each other’s choices. All participants in the distribution chain are disciplined by competition – and all should be protected from power-based abuse of competition. I provide extended analysis of why non-price and non-efficiency preferences of buyers and sellers are a critical part of the competitive process and cannot be comfortably accommodated by consumer welfare standards. I offer examples of preferences, not just of consumers but of all participants in the distribution of goods and services, that are at the heart of the competitive process. I then examine Supreme Court decisions. More than a few recent cases demonstrate a fixation with consumer welfare standards and fail to protect competition. Righting the antitrust ship will require embracing a tradition-based, symmetric welfare standard that equally protects all players in the competitive system.

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