John Kwoka is the Neal F. Finnegan Distinguished Professor of Economics at Northeastern University. He recently served as Chief Economic Advisor to the Chair of the Federal Trade Commission. He previously served at the Antitrust Division of the Justice Department, the Federal Communications Commission, and once before at the FTC. Kwoka's recent research has focused on merger and remedies policy and has resulted in two books: Mergers, Merger Control, and Remedies and Controlling Mergers and Market Power. Tommaso Valletti is Professor of Economics at Imperial College London, where he currently heads the Department of Economics & Public Policy. He is the Director of the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) Research and Policy Network on Competition Policy. He is the Editor of the Journal of Competition Law & Economics. He was the Chief Competition Economist of the European Commission (DG COMP) between 2016 and 2019. Lawrence J. White is the Robert Kavesh Professor of Economics at the Stern School of Business, New York University. He is also the General Editor of the Review of Industrial Organization and has been Secretary-Treasurer of the Western Economic Association International. He has taken leave from NYU to serve in the U.S. Government three times: During 1986-1989 he was a Board Member on the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (and, in that capacity, also a board member for Freddie Mac); during 1982-1983 he was the Chief Economist of the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice; and in 1978-1979 he was a Senior Staff Economist on the President's Council of Economic Advisers.
"""This book is a compendium of essays on U.S. and European antitrust cases by a stellar cast of competition scholars. The focus is on the important economic issues raised by recent enforcement actions. The essays cover a wide range of frontier topics in antitrust, including vertical mergers, acquisitions that eliminate potential competitors, harm to innovation, monopsony, no-poaching agreements, and competition policy for two-sided platforms. The essays are balanced and insightful. Taken together they are essential reading for anyone interested in the current state of international antitrust enforcement."" Richard Gilbert - Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Department of Economics, University of California, Berkeley ""Antitrust Economics at a Time of Upheaval is a refreshing comparative perspective on the role of economics in ways that are largely pro-enforcement and that consider the impact of new technologies. It is an excellent presentation of the view that antitrust need not abandon economics in order to fight anticompetitive practices effectively; to the contrary, economics provides the basic tools for supporting that fight. For example, efficiencies must be proven, but they should be taken seriously. The same is true of predatory pricing. As the editors observe, new theories that either cabin or reject older Chicago-driven doctrine can be both economically rational and empirically robust. Herbert Hovenkamp - James G. Dinan University Professor, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School"