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90 U. Chi. L. Rev. 273 (2023)
Antitrust Worker Protections: The Rule of Reason Does Not Allow Counting of out-of-Market Benefits

handle is hein.journals/uclr90 and id is 285 raw text is: 

















     Anticompetitive conduct toward upstream trading partners may have the effect
of benefiting downstream consumers  even as the conduct harms the firms' workers
or suppliers. Defendants may attempt to justify their upstream conduct-and may
rely on the ancillary restraints doctrine in doing so-on the grounds that the re-
straints create efficiencies benefitting downstream purchasers, rather than focusing
solely on the impact of the restraints on the workers or suppliers in the upstream
market. Such  balancing of harms against out-of-market benefits achieved by a dif-
ferent group should be rejected by antitrust doctrine generally, and specifically in
the case of harms to workers. This type of out-of-market balancing is not supported
by either economic analysis or the basic goals of the antitrust laws. Antitrust's
consumer-welfare prescription properly protects the trading partner participants
(e.g., workers) in any relevant market who are harmed by anticompetitive restraints.
Doctrinal and practical considerations weigh against allowing that protection to be
traded against out-of-market benefits flowing to other groups. This proposition flows
both ways; putting aside antitrust exemptions, it is similarly inconsistent with anti-
trust doctrine to permit firms to coordinate in ways that harm downstream purchas-
ers, based on a purported justification that this purchaser harm is offset by the out-
of-market benefits to the workers. We  conclude that in all cases, multimarket
balancing that treats out-of-market benefits as cognizable justifications for the re-
straints on workers or other input suppliers should be rejected. However, since courts
may  not agree in some limited circumstances such as two-sided platforms, we also
briefly discuss how and in what circumstances such balancing might be undertaken.
We apply this analysis to a series of real and hypothetical scenarios that raise para-
digmatic issues involving these potential conflicting effects as they relate to workers.
We  also apply  our analysis to a  likely post-Alston case attacking the NCAA






    t  Director of Markets & Competition Policy, Washington Center for Equitable
Growth.
    t  Professor (Emeritus) of Economics & Law, Georgetown University Law Center and
Senior Consultant, Charles River Associates. The views expressed in this Essay are our
own and may  not reflect the views of our colleagues, consulting clients, WCEG, or its ad-
visors or sponsors. We are grateful for helpful comments from Dennis Carlton, Daniel
Francis, Scott Hemphill, Jon Jacobson, Tom Krattenmaker, Mark Lemley, Doug Melamed,
Eric Posner, and Randy Stutz, and research assistance of Tessa Griego. All errors are
our own.


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