The Biden administration has aggressively redefined antitrust policy, continuing trends initiated during the Trump presidency while contesting mid-20th-century legal developments that favored efficiency justifications. In this discussion, former antitrust officials Bruce Hoffman and Barry Nigro reflect on the potential outcomes of current policies and speculate on the direction future administrations might take, whether it be a continuation or a revision of existing frameworks. They analyze the implications of these shifts for antitrust enforcement and what a potential Harris or Trump administration might prioritize in this critical area of law.
The Biden administration has aggressively redefined antitrust policy, continuing trends initiated during the Trump presidency while contesting mid-20th-century legal developments that favored efficiency justifications. In this discussion, former antitrust officials Bruce Hoffman and Barry Nigro reflect on the potential outcomes of current policies and speculate on the direction future administrations might take, whether it be a continuation or a revision of existing frameworks. They analyze the implications of these shifts for antitrust enforcement and what a potential Harris or Trump administration might prioritize in this critical area of law.
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