A) U.S.Steel case.
B) Alcoa case.
C) behavioralist approach to antitrust.
D) legal cartel theory of regulation.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) $100 million.
B) $33.3 million.
C) $150 million.
D) $300 million.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) while industrial regulation is sound in theory,bureaucrats allow monopolists to obtain excessive profits.
B) regulated monopolies are tantamount to legal cartels.
C) the objective of regulation is to protect the public from the market power inherent in natural monopolies.
D) firms in some industries want to be regulated.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) when the demand for its product or service is inelastic.
B) if it is producing an inferior good.
C) if economies of scale are experienced over the full range of output.
D) because government grants it an exclusive franchise.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) In antitrust cases defendants attempt to define the relevant market broadly.
B) The courts have varied over time in their interpretations of the antitrust statutes.
C) Antitrust suits can only be originated by the Federal Trade Commission.
D) In antitrust cases the prosecution attempts to define the relevant market narrowly.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) natural gas and cable television industries.
B) cable television and railroad industries.
C) communications and stock-brokering industries.
D) airlines,trucking,and railroad industries.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Celler-Kefauver Act of 1950.
B) Wheeler-Lea Act of 1938.
C) Clayton Act of 1914.
D) Sherman Act of 1890.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) outlawed price discrimination,tying contracts,acquisition of stocks of competing corporations,and interlocking directorates that lessen competition.
B) prohibited unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce that tend to reduce competition.
C) outlawed vertical and conglomerate mergers.
D) prohibited one firm from acquiring the assets of another when the effect was to limit competition.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) social regulation.
B) antitrust policy.
C) industrial regulation.
D) an externality containment policy.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) conglomerate merger.
B) horizontal merger.
C) vertical merger.
D) tying contract.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A horizontal merger between two of the industry's largest firms.
B) A vertical merger between one of an industry's largest firms and one of the many input suppliers in the resource market.
C) A conglomerate merger involving one of the industry's major firms.
D) An agreement by all the industry firms to divide up the market among them.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) social regulation is a better alternative than unregulated natural monopoly.
B) critics who stress the high administrative and compliance costs of social regulation underestimate the social benefits that the regulations produce.
C) the number of regulatory agencies has declined over the past two decades.
D) social regulations reduce product prices.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A buyer-seller relationship between the two firms.
B) A high premerger Herfindahl index in the industry and a large boost in the index because of the merger.
C) A low pre- and post-merger concentration ratio in the industry.
D) Evidence that one of the firms is highly unprofitable.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) establish common boards of directors for previously competing firms.
B) obligate a purchaser of product X to also buy product Y from the same seller.
C) allow manufacturers to specify the retail prices of their products.
D) prohibit firms from selling their products outside of specified geographic areas.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The Wheeler-Lea Act.
B) The Federal Trade Commission Act.
C) The Sherman Act.
D) The Interstate Commerce Act.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) causes deflation.
B) violates the due process clause of the U.S.Constitution.
C) is a relatively greater burden for small firms than for large firms.
D) improves allocative efficiency.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) reflected a behavioralist approach to antitrust.
B) reflected a structuralist approach to antitrust.
C) divided U.S.Steel into a number of smaller companies.
D) ruled that U.S.Steel had engaged in illegal price-fixing.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Price discrimination.
B) Tying contracts.
C) Price-fixing.
D) Interlocking directorates.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the structure of an industry is more important than its behavior in determining violations of the antitrust laws.
B) any firm that faces substantial import competition is exempt from the antitrust laws.
C) although U.S.Steel possessed monopoly power,it had not violated the Sherman Act because it had not unreasonably used that power.
D) the fact that U.S.Steel possessed monopoly power was a violation of the Sherman Act.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Showing 21 - 40 of 113
Related Exams