Bringing Antitrust’s Economic and Institutional Limits to the FTC’s Consumer Protection Authority (Competition Policy International)

In 1914 Congress gave the U.S. Federal Trade Commission sweeping jurisdiction and broad powers to enforce flexible rules to ensure that it would have the ability to serve as the regulator of trade and business that Congress intended it be. Much, perhaps even the great majority, of what the FTC …read more

Source: Global Competition Law Blogs

Category: Cartels

Cite this post

OSCOLA

21st Century Competition, 'Bringing Antitrust’s Economic and Institutional Limits to the FTC’s Consumer Protection Authority (Competition Policy International)' (21st Century Competition, 8 May 2014) <https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/05/bringing-antitrusts-economic-and-institutional-limits-to-the-ftcs-consumer-protection-authority-competition-policy-international/> accessed 30 March 2026.

Chicago

21st Century Competition. "Bringing Antitrust’s Economic and Institutional Limits to the FTC’s Consumer Protection Authority (Competition Policy International)." 21st Century Competition, 8 May 2014. https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/05/bringing-antitrusts-economic-and-institutional-limits-to-the-ftcs-consumer-protection-authority-competition-policy-international/.

BibTeX

@misc{21st-century-competition2014, author = {21st Century Competition}, title = {{Bringing Antitrust’s Economic and Institutional Limits to the FTC’s Consumer Protection Authority (Competition Policy International)}}, year = {2014}, url = {https://www.twentyfirstcenturycompetition.com/2014/05/bringing-antitrusts-economic-and-institutional-limits-to-the-ftcs-consumer-protection-authority-competition-policy-international/}, note = {21st Century Competition} }
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