eHow Logomoney section
  • Saving & Spending
    • Budgeting
    • Banking
    • Credit
    • Cards
    • Loans
  • Real Estate
    • Buying a Home
    • Home Loans
    • Selling a Home
  • Careers
    • Career Advice
    • Land the Job
    • Work for Yourself
  • Your Business
    • Starting a Business
    • Managing Employees
    • Running a Business
  • Insurance
    • Insurance Basics
    • Auto Insurance
    • Life Insurance
  • Retirement
    • Get Started
    • Plan Ahead
    • Make It Last
  • More eHow
    • home
    • style
    • food
    • money
    • health
    • mom
    • tech
Featured:
Allergies
Grilling Guide
eHow Now Blog
  1. eHow
  2. Legal
  3. Business Bankruptcy & Business Law
  4. Antitrust

Antitrust

RSS
  • How to Find a Tract of Land in North Dakota

    North Dakota is known for its wide stretches of flatland, grasses, whipping winds and gale-force winters. North Dakota is less known for having one of the best cost-of-living indexes in the nation and abundant and relatively inexpensive real estate. The state is considered a rural state because the majority of the population lives in small communities in rural settings. If you are searching for a tract of land in North Dakota, you have several resources available to you.

  • Federal Anti-Hoarding Law

    Federal anti-hoarding laws have nothing to do with regulating people who display compulsive junk-collecting habits. Within the United States, these laws take effect under martial law so as to ensure citizens may access food in the occurrence of a catastrophic event.

  • Exclusionary Agreements

    An exclusionary agreement is an agreement between two parties in which the parties agree to work exclusively with one another. Exclusionary agreements are also referred to as exclusive dealing agreements.

  • Economics in Competition Law

    Competition law, which includes antitrust law and other statutes designed to promote market competition and curb unfair business practices, is one of many legal areas that involve the intersection of law and economics.

  • Antitrust Law & Economics in a Nutshell

    Antitrust law affects virtually all areas of business and the economy. This body of law, rooted in economic principles of free trade and competition, seeks to ensure that corporations compete fairly by forbidding monopolies, price-fixing schemes and other acts that restrain healthy competition vital to a free market economy.

  • Federal Antitrust Laws

    Federal antitrust law in the United States is defined by several statutes, as well as by leading judicial precedents. But three statutes in particular have shaped the field: the Sherman and the Clayton Antitrust Acts and the Robinson-Patman Act.

  • Federal Antitrust Law & the Robinson-Patman Act

    Passed in 1936, The Robinson-Patman Act amended Section 2 of the Clayton Act, an antitrust statute aimed at price discrimination. Specifically, the Robinson-Patman Act prevents the same supplier from supplying goods to two different buyers at two different prices, except in certain circumstances. The Act was intended to prevent buyers from large retail establishments from negotiating bargains with suppliers and thus crowding out buyers from smaller retail establishments that would not receive the same bargains.

  • How to Report Antitrust Law Violations

    Antitrust laws at the national and international level are designed to increase competition in a particular market. Corporations that attempt to buy their way into a monopoly and muscle companies out of the market are in violation of antitrust laws. You should report violations of antitrust regulations to the appropriate authorities to protect your business.

  • How to Hire an Antitrust Attorney

    Accusations of antitrust violations against your business can cause harm on a number of levels. Your company's reputation within an industry can be ruined and your budget may be wrecked in your effort to fight antitrust charges. You need to hire an antitrust attorney who is capable of pleading your case in an efficient manner.

ehow.com
  • About eHow
  • How to by Topic
  • How to Videos
  • Sitemap

Copyright © 1999-2012 Demand Media, Inc.
Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Ad Choices en-US

Legal
Verisign seal