A) subsidy and taxation.
B) public ownership and regulation.
C) pricing and incorporation.
D) breaking and merging.
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Multiple Choice
A) whether trade crossed state lines.
B) defining the relevant market.
C) structure versus behavior.
D) the rule of reason.
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verified
True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
B) Federal Communications Commission
C) Sherman Commission
D) Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) 100 to 50.
B) 10,000 to 2,500.
C) 100,000 to 50,000.
D) 10,000 to 5,000.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) $100 million.
B) $33.3 million.
C) $150 million.
D) $300 million.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) conglomerate merger.
B) horizontal merger.
C) vertical merger.
D) tying contract.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) exempt commercial banks from the antitrust laws.
B) make interlocking directorates legal.
C) prohibit misleading and antisocial advertising.
D) make monopoly and acts that restrain trade illegal.
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verified
True/False
Correct Answer
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Essay
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) Celler-Kefauver Act of 1950
B) Wheeler-Lea Act of 1938
C) Clayton Act of 1914
D) Sherman Act of 1890
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the Wheeler-Lea Act
B) the Federal Trade Commission Act
C) the Sherman Act
D) the Interstate Commerce Act
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) monopoly structure
B) price-fixing
C) tying contracts
D) dividing up the market
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) establish common boards of directors for previously competing firms.
B) obligate a purchaser of product X to also buy product Y from the same seller.
C) allow manufacturers to specify the retail prices of their products.
D) prohibit firms from selling their products outside of specified geographic areas.
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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) illegal if the firms are large.
B) illegal because it increases the monopoly power of the resulting firm.
C) legal if there is no resulting unreasonable restraint of trade.
D) legal because the firm will be subject to regulatory control.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) airlines explicitly agreeing to divide the market so that each carrier could have a local monopoly
B) airlines preposting fare changes as a form of tacit collusion
C) Microsoft using its monopoly power to coerce computer manufacturers to favor Internet Explorer over rival browsers
D) price-fixing by Japanese, German, and Swedish auto parts makers
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) illegal under the Clayton Act.
B) illegal under the Celler-Kefauver Act.
C) per se violations of the antitrust laws.
D) more tolerated by government today than two or three decades ago.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) 2,000 and the merger would increase the index by 500.
B) 2,000 and the merger would increase the index by 800.
C) 2,500 and the merger would increase the index by 500.
D) 2,500 and the merger would increase the index by 1200.
Correct Answer
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