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The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC James C. Cooper (Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University School of Law)

The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC By James C. Cooper (Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University School of Law)

Summary

The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC examines a thirty-year period of transition at the Federal Trade Commission, roughly extending from the early 1980s through the present, during which the FTC evolved from an agency on the brink of extinction to one widely respected for its performance and economic sophistication.

The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC Summary

The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC: A Thirty-Year Perspective on Competition and Consumer Protection by James C. Cooper (Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University School of Law)

In the 1970s, the Federal Trade Commission had embarked on an activist consumer protection and antitrust agenda which resulted in severe public and congressional backlash, including calls to abolish the agency. Beginning in 1981, under the direction of Chairman James Miller, the FTC started down a new path of economically-oriented policymaking. This new approach helped save the FTC and laid the groundwork for it to grow into the world-class consumer protection and antritrust agency that it is today. The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC examines this period of transition in light of continuing debate about the FTC's mission. Editor James Campbell Cooper has assembled contributions from leading economists and scholars, including many of the central figures in the Miller-era Commission and today's FTC, who provide a comprehensive and revealing story about the importance of economic analysis in regulatory decision-making. Together, they foster a crucial understanding of the evolution of the FTC from an agency on the brink of extinction to one widely respected for its performance and economic sophistication.

About James C. Cooper (Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University School of Law)

James Campbell Cooper is the Director of Research and Policy at the Law & Economics Center, and a lecturer in law at George Mason University School of Law. He previously spent several years at the Federal Trade Commission serving as an advisor to Commissioner William E. Kovacic, and Acting Director of the FTC's Office of Policy Planning. Before serving at the FTC, James Cooper worked in the antitrust group at Crowell & Moring LLP in Washington, DC. His research has appeared in publications including the Antitrust Law Journal, Boston University Law Review, International Journal of Industrial Organization, Journal of Regulatory Economics, and the International Review of Law & Economics. He has a Ph.D. in Economics from Emory University and a J.D. from George Mason University School of Law, where he was a Levy Fellow and a member of the George Mason Law Review.

Table of Contents

Foreword: James C. Cooper ; INTRODUCTION: ; PLANTING THE SEEDS OF THE REGULATORY REVOLUTION ; Chapter 1: James C. Miller ; Causes and Implications of the Regulatory Revolution at the FTC ; Chapter 2: Panel Discussion ; Politics and Policy in 1981 ; PART I: ; JURISDICTION, POLICY, AND PROCEDURE ; Chapter 3: William E. Kovacic ; The Federal Trade Commission and the Assignment of Regulatory Tasks ; Chapter 4: Julie Brill ; The Future of FTC Jurisdiction Over Antitrust and Consumer Protection: A Commentary ; Chapter 5: Joshua D. Wright & Angela Diveley ; Do Expert Agencies Outperform Generalist Judges? Some Preliminary Evidence from the Federal Trade Commission ; Chapter 6: A. Douglas Melamed ; Paradigm Shopping: Section 5, the FTC, and the Courts ; PART II: ; CONSUMER PROTECTION ; Chapter 7: Fred S. McChesney ; Consumer Protection and James Miller at the Federal Trade Commission ; Chapter 8: J. Howard Beales, III, Timothy J. Muris & Robert Pitofsky ; In Defense of the Pfizer Factors ; Chapter 9: Paul H. Rubin & Thomas M. Lenard ; The FTC Then and Now: Privacy ; Chapter 10: Paul A. Pautler ; Regulation and Behavioral Economics in the Post-Miller FTC ; PART III: ; ANTITRUST ; Chapter 11: Richard S. Higgins & Mark Perelman ; Tying to Mitigate the Deadweight Loss of Monopoly Pricing ; Chapter 12: Daniel A. Crane ; Section 5 and the Innovation Curve ; CONCLUSION: ; IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE FTC ENFORCEMENT ; Chapter 13: Panel Discussion ; Lessons for Setting Priorities ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780199989287
9780199989287
0199989281
The Regulatory Revolution at the FTC: A Thirty-Year Perspective on Competition and Consumer Protection by James C. Cooper (Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, Director, Research and Policy, Law & Economics Center, George Mason University School of Law)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2013-10-03
208
N/A
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