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Chapter 13 Antitrust and Regulation

Chapter 13 Antitrust and Regulation. ©2000 South-Western College Publishing. 1. Which of the following is illegal under the Sherman Act? a. Attempts to monopolize. b. Price fixing. c. Formation of cartels. d. All of the above are illegal.

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Chapter 13 Antitrust and Regulation

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  1. Chapter 13Antitrust and Regulation ©2000 South-Western College Publishing

  2. 1. Which of the following is illegal under the Sherman Act? a. Attempts to monopolize. b. Price fixing. c. Formation of cartels. d. All of the above are illegal. D. The Sherman Act of 1890 is the federal antitrust law to curb trusts, but the federal government did not win a notable case until 1911.

  3. 2. Officers of five large building-materials companies meet and agree that none of them will submit bids on government contracts lower than an agreed-upon level. This is an example of a. price fixing. b. vertical restriction. c. a tying contract. d. an interlocking directorate. A. The Sherman Act was enacted with vague language, but price fixing is clearly a “conspiracy in restraint of trade”.

  4. 3. A fabric shop cannot sell Singer sewing machines if it also sells other brands of sewing machines. This is an example of a. a resale price maintenance. b. territorial restrictions. c. a tying agreement. d. exclusive dealing. D. If the effect is to “substantially lessen competition” such as an agreement between a manufacturer and a retailer is a violation of the Clayton Act of 1914.

  5. 4. Under the Clayton Act, horizontal mergers by stock acquisition were a. not considered. b. illegal if they could be shown to lessen competition. c. illegal under any circumstances. d. legal if they could be shown to lessen competition. B. Horizontal mergers are combinations among competitors in the same industry which, if allowed, eliminate existing competition.

  6. 5. Under the Clayton Act, which of the following was illegal even if it was not shown to lessen competition substantially? a. Price discrimination. b. Tying contracts. c. Horizontal mergers by stock acquisition. d. Interlocking directorates. D. Interlocking directorates is the situation in which a director of one company serves on the board of directors of a competing company.

  7. 6. The importance of the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914 is that it a. set up an independent antitrust agency with the power to investigate complaints. b. strengthened the law against mergers. c. strengthened the law against price discrimination.. d. none of the above. A. The FTC Act of 1914 established a five-member commission appointed by the president to investigate “unfair methods of competition.”

  8. 7. Which of the following is concerned primarily with price discrimination? a. The Sherman Act. b. The Clayton Act. c. The Robinson -Patman Act. d. The Celler-Kefauver Act. C. The Robinson-Patman Act of 1936 is an amendment to the Clayton Act that strengthens the Clayton Act against price discrimination.

  9. 8. Which of the following is concerned primarily with mergers? a. The Sherman Act. b. The Clayton Act. c. The Robinson-Patman Act. d. The Celler-Kefauver Act. D. The Celler-Kefauver Act is called the “antimerger act” because it closed the loophole in the Clayton Act by prohibiting mergers by sale of physical assets.

  10. 9. The Utah Pie case was brought under which of the following laws? a. The Sherman Act. b. The Federal Trade Commission Act. c. The Robinson-Patman Act. d. The Celler-Kefauver Act. C. Utah Pie was a small frozen desert pie firm in Salt Lake City that used three outside national competitors for price discrimination. The Supreme Court ruled in Utah Pie’s favor.

  11. 10. Although U.S. Steel controlled nearly 75% of the domestic iron and steel industry, in 1920 the Supreme Court ruled that the firm was not in violation of the Sherman Act because there was no evidence of abusive behavior. What antitrust doctrine was the court applying in this case? a. The rule of reason. b. The per se rule. c. The marginal cost pricing rule. d. The natural monopoly rule. A. The rule of reason applied when a firm was not engaged in anticompetitive behavior.

  12. 11. In which antitrust case did the Supreme Court begin to apply the per se rule to determine whether a firm was in violation of the Sherman Act? a. The Standard Oil case. b. The Alcoa case. c. The IBM case. d. The MIT case. B. The Supreme Court decision in the Alcoa case of 1945 replaced the rule of reason with the per se rule, which states that the mere existence of monopoly is illegal.

  13. 12. The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was established in a. 1887. b. 1890. c. 1929. d. 1933. A. The ICC was established for the original purpose of regulating rail prices by reducing duplicate trains, depots, and tracks.

  14. 13. Today, the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) regulates airline a. ticket prices. b. routes. c. safety. d. all of the above. e. none of the above; the CAB was abolished in 1984. E. The CAB was established in 1938 to regulate airline fares and air routes.

  15. 14. Which of the following provides the basis for regulation? a. Natural monopoly. b. Externalities. c. Imperfect information. d. All of the above. D. In each of these cases, the argument in favor of regulation is market failure.

  16. 15. Consider a regulated natural monopoly. If the regulatory commission wants to establish a fair-return price, then it should set a price ceiling where the demand curve crosses the monopoly’s long-run a. marginal revenue curve. b. average revenue curve. c. marginal cost curve. d. average cost curve. D. One method for regulators to establish a fair-return price is to set price equal to long-run average cost and the monopolist earns zero economic profit

  17. END

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