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008 260105s2022 nyu b 000 0 eng
020 _a9781954750869
_qhardback
040 _aMYCC
_beng
_cMYCC
_dMYCC
_erda
082 0 4 _223
_a340.59
090 0 0 _a340.59
_dRUL
245 _aRulemaking Authority of the US Federal Trade Commission /
_cedited by Daniel A. Crane ; foreword by J. Howard Beales III, Timothy J. Muris
264 1 _aNew York. NY :
_bInstitute of Competition Law,
_c[2022]
264 4 _c©2022
300 _axiv, 297, xiii-xix pages ;
_c24 cm
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
500 _aFirst printing, June 2022
505 _aCompetition rulemaking : the case for boldness / Marina Lao -- Dead-end road : National Petroleum Refiners Association and FTC "unfair methods of competition" rulemaking / Maureen K. Ohlhausen and Ben Rossen -- The constitutional revolution that wasn't : why the FTC isn't a second national legislature / Berin Szóka and Corbin Barthold -- Policing anticompetitive practices and protecting the competitive process through adjudication vs. rulemaking / Henry C. Su -- Can the Federal Trade Commission use rulemaking to change antitrust law? / Richard J. Pierce, Jr. -- Legal constraints on FTC competition rulemaking / Alden F. Abbott -- Pushing the limits? A primer on FTC competition rulemaking / Maureen K. Ohlhausen and James F. Rill -- Regulatory rents : an agency-cost analysis of the FTC rulemaking initiative / Jonathan M. Barnett -- Case-by-case rules! Old statutes and new tech at the FTC / Neil Chilson -- Privacy rulemaking at the FTC / James C. Cooper -- What happens if the FTC becomes a serious rulemaker? / Aaron L. Nielson -- FTC independence after Seila Law / Daniel A. Crane.
520 _aThis book analyses one of the major initiatives proposed within the movement for competition reform, rulemaking at the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The collection of essays draws on the experience of lawyers and academics, including practitioners with backgrounds at the FTC, to address the myriad questions raised by the prospect of notice-and-comment rulemaking to make major changes in antitrust law. Several chapters focus on unfair methods of competition (UMC) rules, both whether the FTC has this authority, and, if it does, whether and how that authority should be exercised. Others consider the choice between writing rules and case-by-case enforcement from different perspectives, while others yet evaluate the consequences for the FTC if it does become a rulemaking agency. An essential read for all interested in the future of competition law, enforcement and policy. Published in collaboration with the Computer Communications Industry Association (CCIA).
610 _aUnited States Federal Trade Commission
650 _aAntitrust law
650 _aCompetition
_xUnfair
700 1 _aCrane, Daniel A.
_eeditor
700 1 _aBeales, J. Howard.
_ewriter of foreword
700 1 _aMuris, Timothy J.
_ewriter of foreword
942 _2ddc
_n0
_cBK
999 _c630
_d630