Alison Oldale, Apr 01, 2010
The papers in this volume by Eliana Garcés, and Matthew Bennett, John Fingleton, Amelia Fletcher, Liz Hurley & David Ruck provide a very clear overview of behavioral economics and its application to competition policy generally. In this note I will comment on some implications of what they have to say for merger analysis.
Featured News
Italian Antitrust Authorities Open Probe Into Telecom Network-Sharing Deal
May 11, 2026 by
CPI
Coalition of Attorneys General Calls for Expanded State Powers in Antitrust Fight
May 11, 2026 by
CPI
Shein Accuses Temu of Mass Copyright Infringement in UK Legal Battle
May 11, 2026 by
CPI
Fed Survey Finds Increased Worries About AI’s Impact on Financial Stability
May 11, 2026 by
CPI
OpenAI Offers EU Access to New Cyber Model as Anthropic Talks Continue
May 11, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Unilateral Effects
Apr 28, 2026 by
CPI
A Net Present Value Approach to Merger Analysis
Apr 28, 2026 by
Joseph J Simons & Malcolm Coate
Generative AI and Competitive Disruption: Increasingly Relevant for Merger Analysis?
Apr 28, 2026 by
Andrea Coscelli, Emily Chissell, Nitika Bagaria & Tega Akati-Udi
Non-Price Unilateral Effects In Media Mergers
Apr 28, 2026 by
Lapo Filistrucchi & Teresa Oriani
Ecosystem Mergers and Unilateral Effects? A Framework for Assessing the Ecosystem Theory of Harm
Apr 28, 2026 by
Ethel Fonseca, George Tucker & Helder Vasconcelos