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Multiple Choice
A) price-fixing
B) per se violation
C) product design
D) industry concentration
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Multiple Choice
A) market.
B) product.
C) price.
D) firm.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) monopoly pricing and foreign trade.
B) price discrimination and monopoly profits.
C) restraint of trade and monopolization.
D) foreign trade and monopolization.
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Multiple Choice
A) consumer price index
B) unemployment benefits index
C) employment cost index
D) Herfindahl index
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Multiple Choice
A) Vertical mergers are more likely to be acceptable under antitrust laws than are horizontal mergers.
B) A vertical merger entails the merging of two or more competing firms.
C) Horizontal mergers are more likely to be acceptable under antitrust laws than are vertical mergers.
D) Conglomerate mergers occur when two or more firms at various stages in a good's production are combined.
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Multiple Choice
A) would reduce product price.
B) would increase product price.
C) might either increase product price or reduce product price.
D) would reduce average total cost.
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Multiple Choice
A) automotive.
B) railroads.
C) airlines.
D) trucking.
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Multiple Choice
A) regulation encourages firms to inflate their production costs.
B) firms in certain industries want to be regulated rather than face the rigors of competition.
C) social regulation has been carried beyond the point at which marginal benefits and marginal costs are equal.
D) the government is the logical agency to protect consumers from natural monopolies.
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Multiple Choice
A) trusts.
B) mergers.
C) tying contracts.
D) single-seller monopoly.
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Multiple Choice
A) ignore this merger because of the relatively small size of, and increase in, the Herfindahl index.
B) prevent the merger, contending that it violates the Clayton Act.
C) allow the merger if foreign entry to the industry is possible.
D) allow the merger but watch the new firm carefully for future violations of the antitrust laws.
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Multiple Choice
A) increased monopoly power.
B) lower rates of innovation.
C) increased bureaucratic control.
D) decreased prices of goods and services.
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Multiple Choice
A) monopoly structure
B) price-fixing
C) tying contracts
D) dividing up the market
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Multiple Choice
A) Competition among firms is a battle for dominance.
B) The focus of antitrust policy should be on market structure rather than behavior.
C) Competition and creative destruction could lead to monopolies.
D) Monopoly pricing and profits create incentives for firms that are economically beneficial.
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Multiple Choice
A) change in the business practices of Microsoft.
B) merging of Microsoft with another company.
C) breakup of Microsoft into smaller firms.
D) takeover of Microsoft by the government.
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Multiple Choice
A) Celler-Kefauver Act of 1950
B) Wheeler-Lea Act of 1938
C) Clayton Act of 1914
D) Sherman Act of 1890
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Sherman Act
B) Clayton Act
C) Wheeler-Lea Act
D) Federal Trade Commission Act
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Multiple Choice
A) the rule of reason is appropriate and desirable in interpreting the Sherman Act.
B) only unreasonable anticompetitive acts should be regarded as violations of the antitrust laws.
C) industries should be judged on the basis of their technological progress and their price-output behavior.
D) an industry that is highly concentrated will behave monopolistically.
Correct Answer
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