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10 Loy. Consumer L. Rev. 44 (1997-1998)
Consumer Choice: The Practical Reason for Both Antitrust and Consumer Protection Law

handle is hein.journals/lyclr10 and id is 44 raw text is: FEATURE ARTICLES
Consumer Choice:
The Practical Reason for Both Antitrust
and Consumer Protection Law

By Neil W. Averitt and Robert H. Lande
This article is about the relationship between
antitrust and consumer protection law. Its
purpose is to define each area of law, to delin-
eate the boundary between them, to show how
they interact with each other, and to show how
they ultimately support one another as the two
components of a single overarching unity. That
overarching unity is consumer choice. Antitrust
and consumer protection law share a common
purpose in that both are intended to facilitate
the exercise of consumer sovereignty or effec-
tive consumer choice. Such consumer choice
exists when two fundamental conditions are
present: (1) there must be a range of consumer
options made possible through competition; and
(2) consumers must be able to select freely
among these options.
The boundary between antitrust and con-
sumer protection is best defined by reference to
these two elements of consumer choice. The
antitrust laws are intended to ensure that the
marketplace remains competitive, so that a
meaningful range of options is made available
to consumers, unimpaired by practices such as
price fixing or anticompetitive mergers.' The
consumer protection laws are intended to
ensure that consumers can select effectively
from among those options with their critical
faculties unimpaired by such violations as

Neil W. Averitt, B.A. Harvard, M.Sc.
London School of Economics, J.D.
Harvard, is an attorney in the Office of
Policy & Evaluation, Bureau of Competi-
tion, Federal Trade Commission. Mr.
Averitt can be reached at
<navedtt@ftc.gov>.
Robert H. Lande, B.A. Northwestern,
M.P.P. Harvard, J.D. Harvard, is Professor
of Law, University of Baltimore School of
Law. Mr. Lande can be reached at
<rlande@ubmail.ubalt.edu>.
Both authors have practiced in the area
of trade regulation law for twenty years and
have made a specialty of Federal Trade
Commission law. They have made a
particular study of the relationship between
the FTC's competition and consumer
protection missions, believing that, if this
relationship was better understood, it
would lead to more rigorous legal prin-
ciples and stronger public support for each
mission. The authors have explored
aspects of this thesis in a number of
forums over the years, including presenta-
tions to international conferences and
consultations with overseas national law-
revision committees. The present article is
a condensation, adaptation, and update of
Neil W. Averitt & Robert H. Lande, Con-
sumer Sovereignty: A Unified Theory of
Antitrist and Consumer Protection Law, 65
ANTITRUST L.J. 713 (1997). Portions of that
article are incorporated with the permission
of the American Bar Association. The
opinions expressed in this article are solely
the authors' own, and do not necessarily
reflect the views of their colleagues, the
Bureau of Competition, the Federal Trade
Commission, or any individual Commis-
sioner.

44 - Loyola Consumer Law Review

Volume 10, number I

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