Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

Competition Policy Center

Recent Work bannerUC Berkeley

Reinvigorating Horizontal Merger Enforcement

Abstract

Over the past forty years, there has been a remarkable transformation in horizontal merger enforcement in the United States. With no change in the underlying statute, the Clayton Act, there has been a dramatic decline in the weight given to market concentration by the federal courts and by the federal antitrust agencies. Increasing weight has been given to three arguments often made by merging firms in their defense: entry, expansion and efficiencies. We document this dramatic shift and provide examples where courts have approved highly concentrating mergers based on limited evidence of entry and expansion. We show using merger enforcement data and a survey we conducted of merger practitioners that the decline in antitrust enforcement is ongoing, especially at the current Justice Department. We then argue in favor of reinvigorating horizontal merger enforcement by partially restoring the structural presumption and by requiring strong evidence to overcome the government’s prima facie case. We propose several routes by which the government can establish its prima facie case, distinguishing between cases involving coordinated vs. unilateral anti-competitive effects.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View