Hearing Before the Committee on Interstate Commerce, United States Senate, Sixty-second Congress, Pursuant to S. Res. 98: A Resolution Directing the Committee on Interstate Commerce to Investigate and Report Desirable Changes in the Laws Regulating and Controlling Corporations, Persons, and Firms Engaged in Interstate Commerce, 2±ÇU.S. Government Printing Office, 1912 |
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1435 ÆäÀÌÁö
The cases have now settled , I imagine , that the mere lessening of competition is not per se a restraint of trade . We have not yet had a definite and express deliverance from the Supreme Court whether that doctrine is to lead to the ...
The cases have now settled , I imagine , that the mere lessening of competition is not per se a restraint of trade . We have not yet had a definite and express deliverance from the Supreme Court whether that doctrine is to lead to the ...
1443 ÆäÀÌÁö
Simply because a corporation is large it can not fix prices binding on competitors . ... If the prices fixed are oppressive , competition will be greatly strengthened as a result . The ACTING CHAIRMAN . And from your examination and ...
Simply because a corporation is large it can not fix prices binding on competitors . ... If the prices fixed are oppressive , competition will be greatly strengthened as a result . The ACTING CHAIRMAN . And from your examination and ...
1444 ÆäÀÌÁö
Suppose the corporation was willing to maintain prices , such prices as enabled its competitors to live , and did so ... Well , if the theory of the statute is that competition should be conserved for the general good of the public and ...
Suppose the corporation was willing to maintain prices , such prices as enabled its competitors to live , and did so ... Well , if the theory of the statute is that competition should be conserved for the general good of the public and ...
1445 ÆäÀÌÁö
It is assumed , as a proposition of political economy , that the existence of competition will equalize prices or practices in such a way that injurious consequences will not flow from the possession of power in the larger body .
It is assumed , as a proposition of political economy , that the existence of competition will equalize prices or practices in such a way that injurious consequences will not flow from the possession of power in the larger body .
1447 ÆäÀÌÁö
As a result , in course of time all of its competitors failed . ... For the years while I had competition , and for the series of years which have elapsed since I have had no competition , my prices have been precisely the same ...
As a result , in course of time all of its competitors failed . ... For the years while I had competition , and for the series of years which have elapsed since I have had no competition , my prices have been precisely the same ...
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