The Single Entity Question in Antitrust: Ownership, Control and Delegation in Organizations

Williamson, Dean V. "The Economics of Adaptation and Long-term Relationships" (Elgar, 2019)

Posted: 20 May 2019

Date Written: March 2019

Abstract

By the time a young Ronald Coase was composing “The Nature of the Firm” (1937), litigation had already started wending its way through American courts that took up questions that really anticipated Grossman, Hart and Moore on control rights and Simon and Williamson on adaptation, vertical integration and hierarchy in organizations. With the advent of competition law in 1890, courts had already been set up to take up the question of what constitutes a “conspiracy” to restrain trade. Courts eventually started to characterize conspiracies by sorting out what they are not: “single entities” replete with internal processes for exercising and delegating control. But then came questions about whether governance structures that feature less than completely concentrated control could yet secure the status of single entity. A student of organization may yet discern in the many decades of case law a formative “theory of the firm”.

Keywords: theory of the firm, single entity, control rights, adaptation, delegation

JEL Classification: D23, D73, K21, L22

Suggested Citation

Williamson, Dean V., The Single Entity Question in Antitrust: Ownership, Control and Delegation in Organizations (March 2019). Williamson, Dean V. "The Economics of Adaptation and Long-term Relationships" (Elgar, 2019), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3375354

Dean V. Williamson (Contact Author)

Independent ( email )

Washington, DC
United States

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