Visioconférence le mardi 8 décembre 2020
17h00 – 19h30 (Paris) | 11h00 – 13h30 (New York)
En anglais
17h00 – 17h10 (11h00 – 11h10) : Introduction: Antitrust during times of crisis and the lessons from the interwar period
Frédéric Marty (CNRS, Université Côte d’Azur)
17h15 – 17h35 (11h15 – 11h35) : The issue of Bigness in Antitrust enforcement: Were structural remedies a solution?
Naomi R. Lamoreaux (Yale University)
Paper: "The Problem of Bigness: From Standard Oil to Google", Journal of Economic Perspectives, 33(3), Summer 2019, pp.94-117.
17h40 – 18h00 (11h40 – 12h00) : From the War Industries Board to the National Industrial Recovery Act: A US model of regulated competition?
Thierry Kirat (CNRS; Université Paris Dauphine)
Paper by Thierry Kirat and Frédéric Marty: "From the First World War to the National Recovery Administration (1917-1935): The Case for Regulated Competition in the United States during the interwar period"
18h05 – 18h15 (12h05 – 12h15) : Framing Antitrust as Public Interest Law, 1890 till 1960
Dina Waked (Sciences Po Law School)
Paper: “Antitrust as Public Interest Law: Redistribution, Equity, and Social Justice”, The Antitrust Bulletin, 65(1), 2020, pp. 87–101.
18h20 – 18h40 (12h20 – 12h40) : The antitrust policy of the 2nd New Deal (1938): Arguments for free competition
Spencer Weber Waller (Institute for Consumer Antitrust Studies, Loyola University Chicago)
Paper: "The Antitrust Legacy of Thurman Arnold", Saint John's Law Review, 78, 2004, pp.569-614.
18h45 – 19h05 (12h45 – 13h05) : Is the concentration of economic power a risk to democracy
Daniel Crane (University of Michigan)
Paper: “Facism and Monopoly”, Michigan Law Review, 118(7), 2020, pp.1315-1370.
19h10 – 19h20 (13h10 – 13h20) : Concluding Remarks
Robert Boyer (Cournot Centre; Institute of the Americas)