Matthew Bennett, Amelia Fletcher, Liz Hurley, David Ruck, Apr 01, 2010
This paper looks at whether behavioral economics fundamentally changes our understanding of competition policy. We argue that behavioral economics is an important incremental advance in our understanding, just as informational economics was before it. But this does not mean that all previous economic models of competition and markets are now irrelevant. For the most part, they still provide valid and valuable insights. Importantly, behavioral economics does not question our belief in competition policy as a tool for making markets work well for consumers.
Featured News
States Vow to Continue Antitrust Fight Against Live Nation Despite DOJ Settlement
Mar 9, 2026 by
CPI
White House Cybersecurity Plan Calls on Private Sector to Partner on US Operations
Mar 9, 2026 by
CPI
Big Tech Data Centers Become Wartime Targets After Drone Strikes on Amazon Sites
Mar 9, 2026 by
CPI
Anthropic Sues Pentagon to Block National Security Blacklist Over AI Restrictions
Mar 9, 2026 by
CPI
A $300 Billion Crypto Market Is Propping Up US Government Debt
Mar 9, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Behavioral Economics
Feb 22, 2026 by
CPI
Behavioral Antitrust in 2026
Feb 22, 2026 by
Maurice Stucke
Behavioral Economics in Competition Policy: Going Beyond Inertia and Framing Effects
Feb 22, 2026 by
Annemieke Tuinstra & Richard May
Agreeing to Disagree in Antitrust
Feb 22, 2026 by
Jorge Padilla
Recognizing What’s Around the Corner: Merger Control, Capabilities, and the New Nature of Potential Competition
Feb 22, 2026 by
Magdalena Kuyterink & David J. Teece