Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published October 2008 | public
Journal Article

Private v. public antitrust enforcement: A strategic analysis

Abstract

We compare private and public enforcement of the antitrust laws in a simple strategic model of antitrust violation and lawsuit. The model highlights the tradeoff that private firms are initially more likely than the government to be informed about antitrust violations, but are also more likely to use the antitrust laws strategically, to the disadvantage of consumers. Assuming coupled private damages, if the court is sufficiently accurate, adding private enforcement to public enforcement always increases social welfare, while if the court is less accurate, it increases welfare only if the government is sufficiently inefficient in litigation. Pure private enforcement is never strictly optimal. Public enforcement can achieve the social optimum with a fee for public lawsuit that induces efficient information revelation. Private enforcement can also achieve the social optimum with private damages that are efficiently multiplied and decoupled.

Additional Information

Copyright © 2008 Elsevier. Received 20 July 2007; revised 13 January 2008; accepted 2 April 2008. Available online 13 April 2008. For helpful comments, we are extremely grateful to the Editor, Kai Konrad, two anonymous referees, Bob Chirinko, Andrew Daughety, Vivek Ghosal, Gillian Hadfield, Byoung Heon Jun, Mort Kamien, Kaz Miyagiwa, Jennifer Reinganum, Chris Sanchirico, David Sibley, Kathryn Spier, Eric Talley, and participants in the 2005 Asian Law and Economics Conference at Seoul National University, the 2005 International Game Theory Conference and Law and Economics Workshop at SUNY Stony Brook, the 2006 Latin American Econometric Society Meetings at ITAM, and the 2007 Strategic Firm-Authority Interaction in Antitrust Conference at the University of Amsterdam.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023