• Skip to content
  • Skip to footer
American Antitrust Institute

American Antitrust Institute

Promoting competition that protects consumers, businesses, and society.

  • Impact
  • Our Work
    • Latest
    • Research, Education, Advocacy
      • Amicus Briefs
      • Economic & Policy Analysis
      • Film & Video
      • From the Advisory Board
      • Grant Research
      • Legal Analysis
      • Podcasts
      • Public Commentary & Testimony
      • Reports
    • Issues
      • Airlines
      • Banking & Finance
      • Digital Technology
      • Energy
      • Food & Agriculture
      • Health & Pharmaceuticals
      • Innovation
      • Intellectual Property
      • International
      • Labor
      • Media & Communications
      • Retail & Distribution
      • Transportation
  • About AAI
    • Mission & History
    • Our People
    • Careers & Internships
    • AAI Public Service Fellowship
    • Awards
  • News & Events
    • News
      • Latest News
      • Podcasts
      • Social Feed
    • Events
      • All Events
      • CLE Credits
  • Support
    • Independence and Transparency
    • Sponsorships
    • Cy Pres Grants
    • Sherman Society
  • Contact Us
Home / Events / Symposium: Combining Horizontal and Vertical Analysis in Antitrust: Implications of the Work of Robert L. Steiner
Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

AAI Events

Symposium: Combining Horizontal and Vertical Analysis in Antitrust: Implications of the Work of Robert L. Steiner

June 21, 2004

National Press Club

Register

  • Overview
  • Agenda
  • Resources

Under the influence of the Chicago School of neoclassical antitrust economics, for the past generation, U.S. antitrust policy has paid only slight attention to anticompetitive behavior within vertical inter-firm relationships. During this time, scholarship in economics, law, and business has developed new understandings of interactions between horizontal competition and vertical inter-firm relationships, with important implications for policy. Some of the most provocative writing integrating these insights into antitrust has been by Robert L. Steiner, whose unique experience as a prolific author in marketing and economics, president of a national consumer goods company and as an economist at the Federal Trade Commission, provides new perspectives on what Steiner calls “vertical competition” – the interdependent rivalry that takes place between vertically aligned firms. This Roundtable, limited to 65 participants (no charge), will use Steiner’s large but under-recognized body of work as a jumping off point for re-examining antitrust policy. The event is being held in collaboration with the American Marketing Association’s Journal of Public Policy & Marketing and sponsored by Cornerstone Research, Bates White, the David F. Miller Center for Retailing Education and Research, University of Florida and the Coggin College of Business, University of North Florida. Papers will be published in a special symposium issue of the Antitrust Bulletin (4th quarter, 2004)

8:40 am

Introduction

Gregory T. Gundlach, Visiting Eminent Scholar in Wholesaling, University of North Florida and Senior Research Fellow, American Antitrust Institute

Albert A. Foer, President, American Antitrust Institute

9:00 am

The Intellectual History of Vertical Relations in Antitrust Economics

F.M. Scherer, Aetna Professor Emeritus, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

9:30 am

The Intellectual History of Vertical Relations in Marketing

Barton A. Weitz, Executive Director, David F. Miller Center for Retailing Education and Research; JC Penney Eminent Scholar, University of Florida

10:00 am

The Development and Application of Dual-Stage Thinking

Robert L. Steiner, Economic consultant, former Economist, Federal Trade Commission and former President of Kenner Products Co.

10:45 am

Why Do Economists Neglect Retailing and the Competition Between Retailers and Manufacturers?

Michael Lynch, former Chief, Bureau of Economics, FTC
Commentators:

Paul Farris, Landmark Communications Professor of Business Administration, University of Virginia

Pamela Jones Harbour, Commissioner, Federal Trade Commission

Howard P. Marvel, Professor of Economics, Ohio State University
Mary Sullivan, Economist, U.S. Department of Justice

12:00 pm

Luncheon

Introduction:
Jonathan Cuneo, Attorney, Cuneo, Waldman & Gilbert, Director, American Antitrust Institute

Monroe Milstein, Chairman, Burlington Coat Factory

1:30 pm

Implications for Antitrust Analysis

William S. Comanor, Professor of Health Services and Professor of Economics, University of California, Santa Barbara; Director of the Research Program on Pharmaceutical Economics and Policy, University of California, Los Angeles; former Chief, Bureau of Economics, FTC

Philip Nelson, Economists, Inc., formerly economist, Federal Trade Commissioner

2:30 pm

Moderated Roundtable Discussion

Symposium Materials

Support AAI

Promoting competition that protects consumers, businesses, and society is more important than ever. Through our research, education, and advocacy programs, AAI has been active in focusing public and private competition enforcement priorities and shaping progressive competition policy. The only way for AAI to fulfill its mission is through your support.

Make a donation

Footer

About AAI

  • Mission and History
  • Our People
  • Awards
  • Careers & Internships

Our Work

News & Events

Support AAI

Contact Us

Join Our Mailing List

Terms of use
© 2024 American Antitrust Institute. All rights reserved.