Type 1 Error and Uncertainty: Holding the Antitrust Enforcement Pendulum Steady
This article is part of a Chronicle. See more from this Chronicle
Thomas Dillickrath, James Rill, Nov 12, 2009
Recent pronouncements by the leaders of the federal antitrust agencies have brought into sharper focus the debate over how best to balance the risks of Type 1 error (or over-enforcement error) against the risks of Type 2 error (or under-enforcement error) in antitrust enforcement. In this paper, we examine the literature surrounding the debate and suggest that the harm resulting from Type 1 error more likely and more often exceeds that stemming from Type 2 error. Indeed, the Supreme Court has recognized this imbalance in its antitrust jurisprudence, repeatedly insisting on rules that give more weight to avoiding over-deterrence of procompetitive conduct. Especially in the area of single-firm conduct analyzed under Section 2 of the Sherman Act or Section 5 of the FTC Act, the dangers of overly interventionist antitrust rules are not limited to actual government enforcement and private actions that lead to punishing and enjoining procompetitive conduct. Such rules create uncertainty and fear resulting in constructive Type 1 error; that is, businesses forego aggressive competition that benefits consumers for fear of becoming embroiled in government or private enforcement actions. These threats to consumer welfare are compounded by amorphous antitrust rules that make it impossible for businesses to know ex ante whether their conduct will be deemed violative of the antitrust laws. Such legal ambiguity can deter businesses from engaging in efficient, procompetitive conduct; even conduct that would ultimately be found to be legal.
Links to Full Content
Featured News
Congress Pushes to Combat AI Deepfakes in Year-End Funding Deal
Dec 18, 2024 by
CPI
Epic Games Board Resignations Linked to DOJ Antitrust Investigation
Dec 18, 2024 by
CPI
Renault Supports Potential Honda-Nissan Merger Talks
Dec 18, 2024 by
CPI
South Korea’s Antitrust Body Raises Concerns Over AI Market Competition
Dec 18, 2024 by
CPI
Perplexity Caught in Crossfire as DOJ and Google Battle Over Search Dominance
Dec 18, 2024 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Remedies After Illumina/GRAIL– The Thorny Question of Proportionality
Dec 17, 2024 by
Aleksander Tombinski & Ciara Denihan
Why Was Illumina/GRAIL Blocked in the EU? Reviewing The European Commission’s Assessment of Vertical Mergers in Light of the 2022 Prohibition Decision
Dec 17, 2024 by
Will Sparks
The Role of Uncertainty in the Future European Horizontal Merger Guidelines: Lessons Learned From Illumina/GRAIL
Dec 17, 2024 by
Svend Albaek & Daniel Donath
Illumina’s Light on Article 22 EUMR: The Suspended Step and Uncertain Future of EU Merger Control Over Below-Threshold “Killer” Mergers
Dec 17, 2024 by
Anna Tzanaki
EU-Level Jurisdiction Over “Killer Acquisitions” in the Aftermath of Illumina/GRAIL
Dec 17, 2024 by
Peter Whelan