Private Enforcement, Corruption, and Antitrust Design

Author: A E Rodriguez, A Polinsky, A Polinsky, A Polinsky, Alexander Waksman, Andreas Stephan, Andreea Cosnita-Langlais, Andrei Shleifer, Andrzej Baniak, Andrzej Baniak, Bourjade, Claudio Calcagno, D Sokol, Da-Hsiang Lien, Da-Hsiang Lien, Dani Rodrik, Daniel A Crane, Daniel Berkowitz, Derek J Clark, Dina I Waked, Eberhard Feess, Edward L Glaeser, Edward L Glaeser, El Dean, Eleanor M Fox, Eleanor M Fox, Eleanor M Fox, Franz Kronthaler, Gary S Becker, Gianmaria Martini, Gil S Epstein, Gordon Tullock, Harry First, Ilya R Segal, Jakob Svensson, Johann Lambsdorff, Jonathan B Baker, Juin-Jen Chang, Kai H�schelrath, Kenneth M Davidson, Louis Kaplow, Luciana Echazu, Maarten Schinkel, Manisha M Sheth, Mccann Kevin, Michael J Trebilcock, Michal S Gal, Michal S Gal, Nuno Garoupa, Nuno Garoupa, Nuno Garoupa, Paul E Godek, Paul H Rubin, Peter Grajzl, Peter Grajzl, Peter Grajzl, Peter Murrell, R Mcafee, R Mcafee, R Mcafee, Reza Rajabiun, Robert M Feinberg, Roger Bowles, Sebastian Peyer, Simeon Djankov, Spencer Waller, Stefan Voigt, Steven M Shavell, Svetlana Avdasheva, Tay-Cheng Ma, Tay-Cheng Ma, Tim Reuter, Warren F Schwartz, William Breit, William Breit, William E Kovacic, William E Kovacic, William E Kovacic, William E Kovacic, William E Kovacic, William F Shughart, William M Landes
Publisher: Elsevier BV

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Recent adoption of competition laws across the globe has highlighted the importance of institutional considerations for antitrust effectiveness and the need for comparative institutional analyses of antitrust that extend beyond matters of substantive law. Contributing to the resulting nascent research agenda, we examine how the rationale for enabling versus precluding private antitrust enforcement as one salient choice in antitrust design depends on whether antitrust enforcement is corruption-free or plagued by corruption. Contingent on the nature of adjudicatory bias, bribery either discourages private antitrust lawsuits or incentivizes firms to engage in frivolous litigation. Corruption expectedly reduces the effectiveness of antitrust enforcement at deterring antitrust violations. Yet private antitrust enforcement as a complement to public enforcement can be social welfare-enhancing even in the presence of corruption. Under some circumstances, corruption actually increases the relative social desirability of private antitrust enforcement. Our analysis highlights that the appropriate design of antitrust institutions is context-specific

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