TY - BOOK ID - 92885052 TI - Dynamic competition and public policy : technology, innovation, and antitrust issues PY - 2001 SN - 0521782503 0521021812 1139164619 PB - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, DB - UniCat KW - Business, Economy and Management KW - Economics KW - Industrial policy KW - Antitrust law KW - Competition KW - Restraint of trade KW - Technological innovations KW - Information technology KW - Computer software industry KW - Government policy KW - Microsoft Corporation KW - Computer service industry KW - IT (Information technology) KW - Technology KW - Telematics KW - Information superhighway KW - Knowledge management KW - Breakthroughs, Technological KW - Innovations, Industrial KW - Innovations, Technological KW - Technical innovations KW - Technological breakthroughs KW - Technological change KW - Creative ability in technology KW - Inventions KW - Domestication of technology KW - Innovation relay centers KW - Research, Industrial KW - Technology transfer KW - Combinations in restraint of trade KW - Competition law KW - Restrictive trade practices KW - Trade, Restraint of KW - Trade practices, Unfair KW - Unfair trade practices KW - Commercial crimes KW - Trade regulation KW - Monopolies KW - Trusts, Industrial KW - Competition (Economics) KW - Competitiveness (Economics) KW - Economic competition KW - Commerce KW - Conglomerate corporations KW - Covenants not to compete KW - Industrial concentration KW - Open price system KW - Supply and demand KW - Law and legislation KW - Economic aspects KW - Microsoft UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:92885052 AB - During the 1990s, US antitrust policy began to take greater account of economic theories that emphasize the critical role of innovation and change in the competitive process. Several high-profile antitrust cases have focused on dynamic innovation issues as much as or more than static economic efficiency. But does dynamic competition furnish a new rationale for activist antitrust, or a new reason for government to leave markets alone? In this volume, more than a dozen leading scholars with extensive antitrust experience explore this question in the context of the Microsoft case, merger policy, and intellectual property law. ER -