Introduction to Harberger’s Monopoly and Resource Allocation–The Pioneering Article on Deadweight Loss and Empirical Measurement of the Social Costs of Monopoly
Hill Wellford, Nov 01, 2009
Arnold Harberger´s 1954 article, Monopoly and Resource Allocation,brought empirical analysis of the social costs of monopoly into the mainstream of antitrust work. In the mid-twentieth century, the dominant mode of monopoly analysis in the United States (and therefore worldwide) was structural rather than empirical, and that structural approach supported a highly interventionist antitrust regime. Harberger´s 1954 article broke with the then-current economic orthodoxy and set monopoly research on a path that would lead to a strong shift toward empiricism and the development of a more cautious approach for antitrust enforcement. The article is famous for bringing monopoly deadweight loss analysis into the mainstream.
Featured News
UK Competition Regulator Hit by Further Boardroom Departures
Nov 11, 2025 by
CPI
Parker-Hannifin Bets $9.25 Billion on Industrial Filtration Growth
Nov 11, 2025 by
CPI
Judge Grants Preliminary Approval to Tyson’s $85 Million Pork Price-Fixing Settlement
Nov 11, 2025 by
CPI
Senate Bill to End Shutdown Includes Extension to Cyber-Information Sharing Protections
Nov 11, 2025 by
CPI
Momentum Slowed For State Privacy Legislation in 2025, but Enforcement Ramped Up
Nov 11, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Costs of Consolidation
Oct 26, 2025 by
CPI
Does Merger Enforcement Protect Consumers from the Long-Term Costs of Consolidation?
Oct 26, 2025 by
Diana L. Moss
“Praying for Inflation”: How Market Concentration Facilitates Inflationary Pressures
Oct 26, 2025 by
John Kwoka & Muhammad Shabanpour
Unpacking the Remedy: The Hidden Costs of Merger Remedies and the Economist’s Role in Getting Them Right
Oct 26, 2025 by
Sam R. Carless, Mary Coleman & David Weiskopf
Why Industry Consolidation Causes More Concern Than It Should
Oct 26, 2025 by
Michael Noel