Dennis Carlton, Sam Peltzman, Nov 05, 2010
This article introduces the reprint of George Stigler’s A Theory of Oligopoly, first published in 1964. Stigler’s article was a landmark in the theory of industrial organization and in the practice of antitrust. For industrial organization economists it focused attention on the sorry state of oligopoly theory and, using information theory, proposed a theory that could explain the deviations of oligopoly pricing from competitive pricing. For antitrust practitioners the article came to have an important impact on the application of antitrust law, especially in the merger area. Indeed, it is not an understatement to say that Stigler’s theory of oligopoly remains a central pillar in merger policy in most, if not all, antitrust regimes around the world
Featured News
DOJ Pushes Divestments to Protect Competition in Major Power Merger
Dec 8, 2025 by
CPI
EU Probes Meta Over Potential AI Restrictions on WhatsApp
Dec 7, 2025 by
CPI
Netflix’s $72bn Purchase Bid Triggers Concerns Over Consumer Choice
Dec 7, 2025 by
CPI
Judge Formalizes Limits on Google’s Deals With Apple and AI Expansion
Dec 7, 2025 by
CPI
Florida Governor DeSantis Pitches AI Bill of Rights for Residents and Local Governments
Dec 7, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Intellectual Property
Nov 19, 2025 by
CPI
Dealing in Intellectual Property: IP Justifications and Defenses in Digital Markets Cases
Nov 19, 2025 by
Jennifer Dixton
The Evolving Role of Innovation Theories of Harm in the Antitrust Analysis of Life Science Mergers
Nov 19, 2025 by
Michelle Yost Hale, Matthew D. McDonald & Merrill Stovroff
Who Can Fix It? Antitrust, IP Rights, and the Right to Repair
Nov 19, 2025 by
Rosa M. Morales
Copyright, Antitrust, and the Politics of Generative AI
Nov 19, 2025 by
Daryl Lim