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168 U. Pa. L. Rev. 2061 (2019-2020)
Competition Law as Common Law: American Express and the Evolution of Antitrust

handle is hein.journals/pnlr168 and id is 2089 raw text is: ARTICLE
COMPETITION LAW AS COMMON LAW:
AMERICAN EXPRESS AND THE EVOLUTION OF
ANTITRUST
MICHAEL L. KATZt & A. DOUGLAS MELAMEDtt
We explore the implications of the widely accepted understanding that competition
law is common-or judge-made-law. Specifically, we ask how the rule of reason
in antitrust law should be shaped and implemented, not just to guide correct
application of existing law to the facts of a case, but also to enable courts to participate
constructively in the common law-like evolution of antitrust law in the light of
changes in economic learning and business and judicial experience. We explore these
issues in the context of a recently decided case, Ohio v. American Express, and
conclude that the Supreme Court, not only made several substantive errors, but also
did not apply the rule of reason in a way that enabled an effective common law-like
evolution of antitrust law.
INTRODUCTION .......................................................................... 2062
I.THE EVOLUTION OF COMPETITION LAW .................................. 2065
II.THE SUBSTANTIVE MEANING THAT HAS EVOLVED IN THIS
PROCESS............................................................................... 2071
III.THE RULE OF REASON ........................................................... 2072
t Michael L. Katz is the Sarin Chair Emeritus in Strategy and Leadership at the Haas School of
Business and Professor Emeritus in the Department of Economics at the University of California,
Berkeley. Katz served as the government's economic expert in United States v. American Express, which
is how the case was captioned in the lower courts. This paper does not draw on any confidential
materials from that matter.
tt A. Douglas Melamed is Professor of the Practice of Law at Stanford Law School, Stanford
University. The authors are grateful to Scott Hemphill, Alan Meese, John Newman, David Seidman,
and the Editors for insightful comments on earlier drafts.

(2061)

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