Deck 24: Antitrust Laws

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Question
Arnold believes that U.S. firms should be allowed to enter into joint ventures with foreign multinationals without government interference. Betty thinks that the Federal Trade Commission should monitor such joint ventures closely. Based on this scenario, which of the following statements is true?

A) Both subscribe to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
B) Both subscribe to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
C) Arnold's views are closer to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
D) Betty's views are closer to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
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Question
Cal believes criminal penalties for antitrust violations should be increased. Donna believes antitrust offenses should be decriminalized. Based on the scenario, which of the following statements can be inferred?

A) Both subscribe to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
B) Both subscribe to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
C) Cal's views are closer to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
D) Donna's views are closer to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
Question
The Harvard School is a(n) approach to antitrust policy.

A) structural
B) centralized
C) subjective
D) efficiency-based
Question
The School approach to antitrust policy argues that antitrust decisions should be based solely on the criterion of economic .

A) New York; fairness
B) Chicago; fairness
C) New York; efficiency
D) Chicago; efficiency
Question
The Harvard School of antitrust policy favors the consolidation of wealth and power into a few firms capable of competing with the largest foreign corporations.
Question
Which of the following antitrust provisions focuses on the unlawful selling of corporate assets to create a monopoly?

A) Clayton Act, Section 7
B) Clayton Act, Section 2
C) Sherman Act, Section 2
D) Sherman Act, Section 1
Question
Oil Company used the trust arrangement to monopolize the oil industry in the late 1800s.

A) Shell
B) Standard
C) Sun
D) Texas
Question
Advocates of the promotion of the maximization of consumer welfare using market principles and efficiency criteria define consumer welfare as an improvement in the allocation of resources without an impairment to productive efficiency.
Question
The Chicago School is a market or efficiency approach to antitrust policy.
Question
Section 1 of the Sherman Act of 1890 forbids monopolizing, attempts to monopolize, or conspiracies to monopolize.
Question
The Chicago School approach to antitrust policy is a or approach to antitrust policy.

A) fairness; equity
B) fairness; efficiency
C) market; equity
D) market; efficiency
Question
Trusts were originally business arrangements in which owners of stocks in several companies placed their securities in the hands of , who controlled and managed the companies.

A) stockholders
B) trustees
C) third party beneficiaries
D) assignees
Question
Advocates of the antitrust goal that preserves small businesses and an economy characterized by many sellers competing with one another would .

A) define consumer welfare as an improvement in the allocation of resources without an impairment to productive efficiency
B) argue that when large companies are allowed to merge, fix prices, and participate in joint ventures, jobs are lost and plants are shut down in some areas
C) argue that there is a direct correlation between large corporations, economic power, and control of the political process
D) break up large corporations such as General Motors (GM), International Business Machines (IBM), and Microsoft
Question
Advocates of the argue that when large companies are allowed to merge, fix prices, and participate in joint ventures, jobs are lost and plants are shut down in some areas.

A) preservation of small businesses and an economy characterized by many sellers competing with one another
B) prevention of concentration of political and economic power in the hands of a few sellers in each industry
C) preservation of local control of business and protection against the effects of labor dislocation
D) promotion of the maximization of consumer welfare using market principles and efficiency criteria
Question
Which of the following antitrust provisions focuses on monopolization and conspiracies to monopolize?

A) Clayton Act, Section 1
B) Sherman Act, Section 2
C) Sherman Act, Section 1
D) Clayton Act, Section 2
Question
Because the Act (enacted in 1890) was aimed at monopolies that called themselves trusts, it was called a(n) statute.

A) Clayton; antitrust
B) Clayton; fiduciary
C) Sherman; antitrust
D) Sherman; fiduciary
Question
A trust is defined as a .

A) policy that is based solely on the goal of economic efficiency or the maximization of consumer welfare
B) business arrangement in which owners of stocks in several companies place their securities with trustees, who jointly manage the companies and pay the owners a specific share of their earnings
C) policy that is based on the desirability of preserving competition to prevent the accumulation of economic and political power, the dislocation of labor, and market inefficiency
D) business arrangement in which owners of stocks in several companies place their securities in an account that stores earnings
Question
The formulation and enforcement of antitrust policy have been substantially affected by the disciplines of and .

A) economics; ethics
B) sociology; economics
C) sociology; law
D) law; economics
Question
George believes that antitrust policy should lead to more efficient markets. Based on George's view, which of the following statements is true?

A) George subscribes to both the Chicago and the Harvard Schools of antitrust policy.
B) George subscribes to neither the Chicago School nor the Harvard School of antitrust policy.
C) George subscribes to the Chicago School, but not the Harvard School of antitrust policy.
D) George subscribes to the Harvard School, but not the Chicago School of antitrust policy.
Question
The Chicago School approach to antitrust policy argues that antitrust decisions should be based solely on the criterion of of welfare.

A) maximization; stakeholder
B) maximization; consumer
C) equalization; stakeholder
D) equalization; consumer
Question
The defending parties of civil suits, because of the cost of litigation and the attendant bad publicity,often choose not to fight a case and instead enter into a .

A) consent decree
B) guilty plea
C) price-fixing clause
D) replacement order
Question
To enforce federal antitrust law in civil cases, the U.S. Justice Department files .

A) an administrative action with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
B) suit in federal district court
C) an administrative action with the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)
D) suit to enforce the law through a private internal administrative action at the Justice Department
Question
The Harvard School proponents of preserving small businesses are criticized by adherents of the Chicago School, who favor only consumer welfare maximization. Discuss with examples.
Question
Which of the following activities is judged by the rule-of-reason standard?

A) horizontal price-fixing
B) group boycotts
C) some divisions of markets
D) exchange of information
Question
Which of the following refers to a concerted action by two or more individuals or business entities in violation of the Sherman Act?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
Question
A nolo contendere plea is an admission of guilt and is treated as such by a judge.
Question
Price-fixing among competitors is a serious violation of the Sherman Act.
Question
A class action suit is brought by a member of a group of persons on behalf of all members of the group.
Question
Which of the following serves as an incentive to bring private actions for the enforcement of antitrust laws?

A) fines and imprisonment
B) precedents rendered by administrative law judges
C) presidential commendations
D) triple the amount for damages and reasonable attorney fees
Question
The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department has concurrent jurisdiction with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to enforce the Act.

A) Clayton
B) Sherman
C) FTC
D) Securities
Question
In the context of implied agreements established by circumstantial evidence, which of the following are the two major problems that courts have to deal with that violate the Sherman Act?

A) intra-enterprise conspiracy and restraint of trade
B) intra-enterprise conspiracy and conscious parallelism
C) class action suits and restraint of trade
D) class action suits and conscious parallelism
Question
A corporation convicted of criminal conduct under the Sherman Act faces a fine of up to .

A) $100,000 for each offense
B) $100,000 for all offenses in the aggregate
C) $10,000,000 per offense to a maximum of $100,000,000 for all offenses in aggregate
D) $100,000,000 for each offense
Question
Compare and contrast the Chicago and Harvard Schools' approaches to antitrust policy.
Question
Which of the following is true of the enforcement of antitrust laws?

A) Enforcement of antitrust laws is carried out only in the public sectors.
B) Enforcement of antitrust laws is carried out only in the private sectors.
C) The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department exclusively enforces the Sherman Act.
D) The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department has exclusive jurisdiction to enforce the Federal Trade Commission Act.
Question
Parens patriae suits are usually brought by a state attorney general on behalf of purchasers and taxpayers in a state.
Question
Discuss the various goals of the antitrust statutes.
Question
Which of the following activities is judged by the per se standard?

A) exchange of information
B) joint research and development ventures
C) group boycotts
D) vertical price and non-price restraints
Question
Which of the following refers to identical actions that are taken independently but nearly simultaneously by two or more leading companies in an industry?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
Question
Which of the following is true of a nolo contendere plea?

A) A nolo contendere plea is an admission of guilt.
B) A nolo contendere plea subjects the defendant to a lesser punishment than would result from conviction at a trial.
C) Like a consent decree, a nolo contendere plea need not be approved by the court.
D) A nolo contendere plea cannot be negotiated between the Justice Department and corporate or individual criminal defendants.
Question
Which of the following terms refers to an action that interferes with the economic law of supply and demand?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
Question
The courts' major concern in cases involving vertical price-fixing has been whether the .

A) fixed price was reasonable to consumers
B) fixed price was in line with prices charged by competitors retailing the same product
C) retailer made the pricing decision independently or by agreement with the manufacturer
D) manufacturer could remain financially viable at the agreed price
Question
Section of the Clayton Act prohibits fictitious brokerage payments.

A) 2(a)
B) 2(d)
C) 2(c)
D) 2(f)
Question
Landmark Oil Company has a contract with Atlas Oil Stations that requires Atlas to buy all its oil and petroleum products from Landmark only. This is an example of a(n) .

A) market division contract
B) vertical price-fixing arrangement
C) tying arrangement
D) exclusive dealing contract
Question
Discuss arguments for the application of rule-of-reason standard and the per se standard to vertical territorial restraints.
Question
Non-price vertical restraints are restraints used by a manufacturer to limit the territory in which a retailer may sell the manufacturer's products and the number of stores the retailer can operate, as well as the customers the retailer can serve, in a location.
Question
A tying arrangement involves .

A) a seller agreeing to sell a product on condition that the purchaser buys a second product
B) two companies with similar products merging to increase their market share
C) one company purchasing another company with similar products using a hostile takeover approach
D) a purchaser agreeing to buy a product at a "suggested retail price"
Question
Explain the types of activities that are considered to be horizontal restraints of trade.
Question
If cross-elasticity of demand is positive, an increase in price of the alleged monopolistic product will result in consumers' sticking to the same product.
Question
Which of the following constitutes a vertical restraint?

A) an anticompetitive agreement between two competitors
B) an exclusive-dealing contract between a manufacturer and a retailer
C) a group boycott by criminal defense attorneys seeking higher fees
D) the formation of a market division by two manufacturers
Question
occurs when a discriminatory price is passed along from a secondary-line buyer to a retailer.

A) Predatory pricing
B) Primary-line injury
C) Variable pricing
D) Tertiary-line injury
Question
Notions Corporation holds a dominant position in the market because of its superior line of products. In fact, it now controls 90 percent of the product market within the relevant geographic market. Consumers are willing to pay more for Notions' products despite the fact that a few competitors offer similar products at substantially lower prices. If a competitor were to charge Notions with being a monopolist under Section 2 of the Sherman Act, which of the following statements is true?

A) The competitor's case would fail because a monopoly is defined as a firm having no competition.
B) The competitor's case would fail unless it could show intent on the part of Notions to monopolize the market.
C) The competitor's case would succeed because Notions controls 90 percent of the product market within the relevant geographic market.
D) The competitor's case would succeed because Notions has attained both market power and overwhelming market share.
Question
Predatory pricing is pricing below the average variable cost in order to drive out competition.
Question
Price differences in milk cartons that are slightly different in size falls under Section of the Clayton Act.

A) 2(f)
B) 2(d)
C) 2(b)
D) 2(a)
Question
Which of the following is true of Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act?

A) Sales can exist without enforceable contracts.
B) Services and intangibles are considered to be commodities.
C) Commodities must be of similar grade and quality.
D) Two sales by a single seller to two purchasers should take place in intrastate commerce.
Question
Which of the following concepts is important in the determination of a company's relevant product market?

A) advertising budget
B) retail sales tax rate
C) cross-elasticity of demand
D) government spending projections
Question
Courts generally have defined the geographic market as the area in which the defendant's firm .

A) competes head-on with others in the relevant product market
B) focuses the bulk of its budget on advertising
C) engages in horizontal price-fixing
D) contracts with retailers in cases involving vertical restraints
Question
injury occurs when a seller cuts prices in one geographic area in order to drive out a local competitor.

A) Secondary-line
B) Primary-line
C) Collateral-line
D) Tertiary-line
Question
Restraint of trade is the action that interferes with the political laws governing an economy.
Question
An economic market situation in which a single business has the power to fix the price of goods or services is called a monopoly.
Question
Which of the following terms refers to a price differential that is below the average variable cost for the seller, considered predatory, and therefore illegal, under the Clayton Act?

A) variable pricing
B) price discrimination
C) tying arrangement
D) interlocking directorate
Question
Which of the following terms refers to one company's acquisition of another company's assets or stock in such a way that the second company is absorbed by the first?

A) diversification
B) penetration
C) merger
D) collusion
Question
State the reasons for the increase in mergers and the criteria for determining the legality of mergers.
Question
Which of the following acts prohibits "unfair methods of competition"?

A) the Clayton Act of 1914
B) the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act of 1976
C) the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914
D) the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Question
Steinem's, a women's clothing line, decides to acquire a company that owns several retail outlets that sell its clothing. This is an example of a merger.

A) backward horizontal
B) forward horizontal
C) backward vertical
D) forward vertical
Question
Which of the following forms of price discrimination occurs at the buyer level?

A) Secondary-line injury
B) Primary-line injury
C) Collateral-line injury
D) Tertiary-line injury
Question
Courts have generally relied on Section of the Act in cases concerning tying arrangements and exclusive-dealing contracts.

A) 3; Clayton
B) 3; Sherman
C) 1; Clayton
D) 1; Sherman
Question
Merger guidelines constitute law and, therefore, serve as more than just an advisory function.
Question
Which of the following acts amended Section 7 of the Clayton Act and introduced a premerger notification requirement into the area of mergers?

A) the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
B) the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
C) the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914
D) the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act of 1976
Question
Section of the Clayton Act prohibits an individual from becoming a director in two or more corporations if any of them has capital, surplus, and individual profits aggregating more than $21,327,000 or competitive sales of $2,132,000 when engaged in interstate commerce.

A) 2
B) 8
C) 3
D) 7
Question
All tying arrangements and exclusive-dealing contracts are per se illegal.
Question
General Automotive, a car manufacturer, purchased Bluestone Motors, its competitor, and thus eliminated the competition at its level in the industry. This is an example of .

A) a vertical merger
B) a horizontal merger
C) market diversification
D) market penetration
Question
Which of the following is true of the enforcement of the Clayton Act of 1914?

A) When the Clayton Act was enacted, it provided criminal punishment for violators.
B) The Clayton Act does not allow individuals to obtain injunctions.
C) The Justice Department, the Federal Trade Commission, and private individuals and corporations can all enforce Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
D) If a business is found guilty of violating the Sherman Act, this finding cannot be used as evidence of a violation when a party sues for damages under the Clayton Act.
Question
Summarize the provisions of the Clayton Act as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act.
Question
List the factors courts have traditionally examined in order to gauge a merger's impact on competition.
Question
The "sales" element that must be proved by a plaintiff in any action brought under Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act must be three or more actual sales.
Question
Mergers may take place for all but which of the following reasons?

A) the philosophy that "bigness" is not "bad"
B) a desire to increase competition in the relevant market
C) tax credits for research and development
D) economies of scale
Question
If two sales by a single seller to two purchasers take place in intrastate commerce, the Clayton Act does not apply.
Question
The purpose of Section of the Act is to prohibit anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions that tend to lessen competition at their incipiency.

A) 3; Clayton
B) 7; Clayton
C) 1; Sherman
D) 3 Sherman
Question
Secondary-line injury occurs when competitors of one of the buyers are injured because the seller sold to that one buyer at a lower price than it sold to the others.
Question
mergers involve the acquisition by one firm of another that produces products or services that are not directly related to those of the acquiring firm.

A) Conglomerate
B) Forward vertical
C) Backward vertical
D) Horizontal
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Deck 24: Antitrust Laws
1
Arnold believes that U.S. firms should be allowed to enter into joint ventures with foreign multinationals without government interference. Betty thinks that the Federal Trade Commission should monitor such joint ventures closely. Based on this scenario, which of the following statements is true?

A) Both subscribe to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
B) Both subscribe to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
C) Arnold's views are closer to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
D) Betty's views are closer to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
C
2
Cal believes criminal penalties for antitrust violations should be increased. Donna believes antitrust offenses should be decriminalized. Based on the scenario, which of the following statements can be inferred?

A) Both subscribe to the Chicago School approach to antitrust policy.
B) Both subscribe to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
C) Cal's views are closer to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
D) Donna's views are closer to the Harvard School approach to antitrust policy.
D
3
The Harvard School is a(n) approach to antitrust policy.

A) structural
B) centralized
C) subjective
D) efficiency-based
A
4
The School approach to antitrust policy argues that antitrust decisions should be based solely on the criterion of economic .

A) New York; fairness
B) Chicago; fairness
C) New York; efficiency
D) Chicago; efficiency
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5
The Harvard School of antitrust policy favors the consolidation of wealth and power into a few firms capable of competing with the largest foreign corporations.
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6
Which of the following antitrust provisions focuses on the unlawful selling of corporate assets to create a monopoly?

A) Clayton Act, Section 7
B) Clayton Act, Section 2
C) Sherman Act, Section 2
D) Sherman Act, Section 1
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7
Oil Company used the trust arrangement to monopolize the oil industry in the late 1800s.

A) Shell
B) Standard
C) Sun
D) Texas
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8
Advocates of the promotion of the maximization of consumer welfare using market principles and efficiency criteria define consumer welfare as an improvement in the allocation of resources without an impairment to productive efficiency.
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9
The Chicago School is a market or efficiency approach to antitrust policy.
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10
Section 1 of the Sherman Act of 1890 forbids monopolizing, attempts to monopolize, or conspiracies to monopolize.
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11
The Chicago School approach to antitrust policy is a or approach to antitrust policy.

A) fairness; equity
B) fairness; efficiency
C) market; equity
D) market; efficiency
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12
Trusts were originally business arrangements in which owners of stocks in several companies placed their securities in the hands of , who controlled and managed the companies.

A) stockholders
B) trustees
C) third party beneficiaries
D) assignees
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Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
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13
Advocates of the antitrust goal that preserves small businesses and an economy characterized by many sellers competing with one another would .

A) define consumer welfare as an improvement in the allocation of resources without an impairment to productive efficiency
B) argue that when large companies are allowed to merge, fix prices, and participate in joint ventures, jobs are lost and plants are shut down in some areas
C) argue that there is a direct correlation between large corporations, economic power, and control of the political process
D) break up large corporations such as General Motors (GM), International Business Machines (IBM), and Microsoft
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14
Advocates of the argue that when large companies are allowed to merge, fix prices, and participate in joint ventures, jobs are lost and plants are shut down in some areas.

A) preservation of small businesses and an economy characterized by many sellers competing with one another
B) prevention of concentration of political and economic power in the hands of a few sellers in each industry
C) preservation of local control of business and protection against the effects of labor dislocation
D) promotion of the maximization of consumer welfare using market principles and efficiency criteria
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15
Which of the following antitrust provisions focuses on monopolization and conspiracies to monopolize?

A) Clayton Act, Section 1
B) Sherman Act, Section 2
C) Sherman Act, Section 1
D) Clayton Act, Section 2
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16
Because the Act (enacted in 1890) was aimed at monopolies that called themselves trusts, it was called a(n) statute.

A) Clayton; antitrust
B) Clayton; fiduciary
C) Sherman; antitrust
D) Sherman; fiduciary
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17
A trust is defined as a .

A) policy that is based solely on the goal of economic efficiency or the maximization of consumer welfare
B) business arrangement in which owners of stocks in several companies place their securities with trustees, who jointly manage the companies and pay the owners a specific share of their earnings
C) policy that is based on the desirability of preserving competition to prevent the accumulation of economic and political power, the dislocation of labor, and market inefficiency
D) business arrangement in which owners of stocks in several companies place their securities in an account that stores earnings
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
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18
The formulation and enforcement of antitrust policy have been substantially affected by the disciplines of and .

A) economics; ethics
B) sociology; economics
C) sociology; law
D) law; economics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
George believes that antitrust policy should lead to more efficient markets. Based on George's view, which of the following statements is true?

A) George subscribes to both the Chicago and the Harvard Schools of antitrust policy.
B) George subscribes to neither the Chicago School nor the Harvard School of antitrust policy.
C) George subscribes to the Chicago School, but not the Harvard School of antitrust policy.
D) George subscribes to the Harvard School, but not the Chicago School of antitrust policy.
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20
The Chicago School approach to antitrust policy argues that antitrust decisions should be based solely on the criterion of of welfare.

A) maximization; stakeholder
B) maximization; consumer
C) equalization; stakeholder
D) equalization; consumer
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21
The defending parties of civil suits, because of the cost of litigation and the attendant bad publicity,often choose not to fight a case and instead enter into a .

A) consent decree
B) guilty plea
C) price-fixing clause
D) replacement order
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Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
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22
To enforce federal antitrust law in civil cases, the U.S. Justice Department files .

A) an administrative action with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
B) suit in federal district court
C) an administrative action with the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)
D) suit to enforce the law through a private internal administrative action at the Justice Department
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23
The Harvard School proponents of preserving small businesses are criticized by adherents of the Chicago School, who favor only consumer welfare maximization. Discuss with examples.
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24
Which of the following activities is judged by the rule-of-reason standard?

A) horizontal price-fixing
B) group boycotts
C) some divisions of markets
D) exchange of information
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25
Which of the following refers to a concerted action by two or more individuals or business entities in violation of the Sherman Act?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
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Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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26
A nolo contendere plea is an admission of guilt and is treated as such by a judge.
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k this deck
27
Price-fixing among competitors is a serious violation of the Sherman Act.
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28
A class action suit is brought by a member of a group of persons on behalf of all members of the group.
Unlock Deck
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29
Which of the following serves as an incentive to bring private actions for the enforcement of antitrust laws?

A) fines and imprisonment
B) precedents rendered by administrative law judges
C) presidential commendations
D) triple the amount for damages and reasonable attorney fees
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Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department has concurrent jurisdiction with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to enforce the Act.

A) Clayton
B) Sherman
C) FTC
D) Securities
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31
In the context of implied agreements established by circumstantial evidence, which of the following are the two major problems that courts have to deal with that violate the Sherman Act?

A) intra-enterprise conspiracy and restraint of trade
B) intra-enterprise conspiracy and conscious parallelism
C) class action suits and restraint of trade
D) class action suits and conscious parallelism
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Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
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32
A corporation convicted of criminal conduct under the Sherman Act faces a fine of up to .

A) $100,000 for each offense
B) $100,000 for all offenses in the aggregate
C) $10,000,000 per offense to a maximum of $100,000,000 for all offenses in aggregate
D) $100,000,000 for each offense
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33
Compare and contrast the Chicago and Harvard Schools' approaches to antitrust policy.
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34
Which of the following is true of the enforcement of antitrust laws?

A) Enforcement of antitrust laws is carried out only in the public sectors.
B) Enforcement of antitrust laws is carried out only in the private sectors.
C) The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department exclusively enforces the Sherman Act.
D) The Antitrust Division of the Justice Department has exclusive jurisdiction to enforce the Federal Trade Commission Act.
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35
Parens patriae suits are usually brought by a state attorney general on behalf of purchasers and taxpayers in a state.
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k this deck
36
Discuss the various goals of the antitrust statutes.
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37
Which of the following activities is judged by the per se standard?

A) exchange of information
B) joint research and development ventures
C) group boycotts
D) vertical price and non-price restraints
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which of the following refers to identical actions that are taken independently but nearly simultaneously by two or more leading companies in an industry?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 99 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which of the following is true of a nolo contendere plea?

A) A nolo contendere plea is an admission of guilt.
B) A nolo contendere plea subjects the defendant to a lesser punishment than would result from conviction at a trial.
C) Like a consent decree, a nolo contendere plea need not be approved by the court.
D) A nolo contendere plea cannot be negotiated between the Justice Department and corporate or individual criminal defendants.
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40
Which of the following terms refers to an action that interferes with the economic law of supply and demand?

A) conscious parallelism
B) collusion
C) restraint of trade
D) conspiracy
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41
The courts' major concern in cases involving vertical price-fixing has been whether the .

A) fixed price was reasonable to consumers
B) fixed price was in line with prices charged by competitors retailing the same product
C) retailer made the pricing decision independently or by agreement with the manufacturer
D) manufacturer could remain financially viable at the agreed price
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42
Section of the Clayton Act prohibits fictitious brokerage payments.

A) 2(a)
B) 2(d)
C) 2(c)
D) 2(f)
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43
Landmark Oil Company has a contract with Atlas Oil Stations that requires Atlas to buy all its oil and petroleum products from Landmark only. This is an example of a(n) .

A) market division contract
B) vertical price-fixing arrangement
C) tying arrangement
D) exclusive dealing contract
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44
Discuss arguments for the application of rule-of-reason standard and the per se standard to vertical territorial restraints.
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45
Non-price vertical restraints are restraints used by a manufacturer to limit the territory in which a retailer may sell the manufacturer's products and the number of stores the retailer can operate, as well as the customers the retailer can serve, in a location.
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46
A tying arrangement involves .

A) a seller agreeing to sell a product on condition that the purchaser buys a second product
B) two companies with similar products merging to increase their market share
C) one company purchasing another company with similar products using a hostile takeover approach
D) a purchaser agreeing to buy a product at a "suggested retail price"
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47
Explain the types of activities that are considered to be horizontal restraints of trade.
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48
If cross-elasticity of demand is positive, an increase in price of the alleged monopolistic product will result in consumers' sticking to the same product.
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49
Which of the following constitutes a vertical restraint?

A) an anticompetitive agreement between two competitors
B) an exclusive-dealing contract between a manufacturer and a retailer
C) a group boycott by criminal defense attorneys seeking higher fees
D) the formation of a market division by two manufacturers
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50
occurs when a discriminatory price is passed along from a secondary-line buyer to a retailer.

A) Predatory pricing
B) Primary-line injury
C) Variable pricing
D) Tertiary-line injury
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51
Notions Corporation holds a dominant position in the market because of its superior line of products. In fact, it now controls 90 percent of the product market within the relevant geographic market. Consumers are willing to pay more for Notions' products despite the fact that a few competitors offer similar products at substantially lower prices. If a competitor were to charge Notions with being a monopolist under Section 2 of the Sherman Act, which of the following statements is true?

A) The competitor's case would fail because a monopoly is defined as a firm having no competition.
B) The competitor's case would fail unless it could show intent on the part of Notions to monopolize the market.
C) The competitor's case would succeed because Notions controls 90 percent of the product market within the relevant geographic market.
D) The competitor's case would succeed because Notions has attained both market power and overwhelming market share.
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52
Predatory pricing is pricing below the average variable cost in order to drive out competition.
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53
Price differences in milk cartons that are slightly different in size falls under Section of the Clayton Act.

A) 2(f)
B) 2(d)
C) 2(b)
D) 2(a)
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54
Which of the following is true of Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act?

A) Sales can exist without enforceable contracts.
B) Services and intangibles are considered to be commodities.
C) Commodities must be of similar grade and quality.
D) Two sales by a single seller to two purchasers should take place in intrastate commerce.
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55
Which of the following concepts is important in the determination of a company's relevant product market?

A) advertising budget
B) retail sales tax rate
C) cross-elasticity of demand
D) government spending projections
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56
Courts generally have defined the geographic market as the area in which the defendant's firm .

A) competes head-on with others in the relevant product market
B) focuses the bulk of its budget on advertising
C) engages in horizontal price-fixing
D) contracts with retailers in cases involving vertical restraints
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57
injury occurs when a seller cuts prices in one geographic area in order to drive out a local competitor.

A) Secondary-line
B) Primary-line
C) Collateral-line
D) Tertiary-line
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58
Restraint of trade is the action that interferes with the political laws governing an economy.
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59
An economic market situation in which a single business has the power to fix the price of goods or services is called a monopoly.
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60
Which of the following terms refers to a price differential that is below the average variable cost for the seller, considered predatory, and therefore illegal, under the Clayton Act?

A) variable pricing
B) price discrimination
C) tying arrangement
D) interlocking directorate
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61
Which of the following terms refers to one company's acquisition of another company's assets or stock in such a way that the second company is absorbed by the first?

A) diversification
B) penetration
C) merger
D) collusion
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62
State the reasons for the increase in mergers and the criteria for determining the legality of mergers.
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63
Which of the following acts prohibits "unfair methods of competition"?

A) the Clayton Act of 1914
B) the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act of 1976
C) the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914
D) the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
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64
Steinem's, a women's clothing line, decides to acquire a company that owns several retail outlets that sell its clothing. This is an example of a merger.

A) backward horizontal
B) forward horizontal
C) backward vertical
D) forward vertical
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65
Which of the following forms of price discrimination occurs at the buyer level?

A) Secondary-line injury
B) Primary-line injury
C) Collateral-line injury
D) Tertiary-line injury
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66
Courts have generally relied on Section of the Act in cases concerning tying arrangements and exclusive-dealing contracts.

A) 3; Clayton
B) 3; Sherman
C) 1; Clayton
D) 1; Sherman
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67
Merger guidelines constitute law and, therefore, serve as more than just an advisory function.
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68
Which of the following acts amended Section 7 of the Clayton Act and introduced a premerger notification requirement into the area of mergers?

A) the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
B) the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
C) the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914
D) the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act of 1976
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69
Section of the Clayton Act prohibits an individual from becoming a director in two or more corporations if any of them has capital, surplus, and individual profits aggregating more than $21,327,000 or competitive sales of $2,132,000 when engaged in interstate commerce.

A) 2
B) 8
C) 3
D) 7
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70
All tying arrangements and exclusive-dealing contracts are per se illegal.
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71
General Automotive, a car manufacturer, purchased Bluestone Motors, its competitor, and thus eliminated the competition at its level in the industry. This is an example of .

A) a vertical merger
B) a horizontal merger
C) market diversification
D) market penetration
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72
Which of the following is true of the enforcement of the Clayton Act of 1914?

A) When the Clayton Act was enacted, it provided criminal punishment for violators.
B) The Clayton Act does not allow individuals to obtain injunctions.
C) The Justice Department, the Federal Trade Commission, and private individuals and corporations can all enforce Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
D) If a business is found guilty of violating the Sherman Act, this finding cannot be used as evidence of a violation when a party sues for damages under the Clayton Act.
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73
Summarize the provisions of the Clayton Act as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act.
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74
List the factors courts have traditionally examined in order to gauge a merger's impact on competition.
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75
The "sales" element that must be proved by a plaintiff in any action brought under Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act must be three or more actual sales.
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76
Mergers may take place for all but which of the following reasons?

A) the philosophy that "bigness" is not "bad"
B) a desire to increase competition in the relevant market
C) tax credits for research and development
D) economies of scale
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77
If two sales by a single seller to two purchasers take place in intrastate commerce, the Clayton Act does not apply.
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78
The purpose of Section of the Act is to prohibit anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions that tend to lessen competition at their incipiency.

A) 3; Clayton
B) 7; Clayton
C) 1; Sherman
D) 3 Sherman
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79
Secondary-line injury occurs when competitors of one of the buyers are injured because the seller sold to that one buyer at a lower price than it sold to the others.
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80
mergers involve the acquisition by one firm of another that produces products or services that are not directly related to those of the acquiring firm.

A) Conglomerate
B) Forward vertical
C) Backward vertical
D) Horizontal
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