Mark Glick is a professor at the University of Utah where he teaches law and economics, antitrust law, and industrial organization. He grew up in Los Angeles and attended UCLA where he received a BA in philosophy and an MA in sociology. Then he completed his PhD in economics at the New School for Social Research in New York. After his PhD, he attended Columbia Law School with a law and economics fellowship and received his JD degree. After law school he practiced antitrust law in New York and Utah. He is a member of both the New York and Utah bar associations. He is currently the economics editor of the Anti-Trust Bulletin.

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The Horizontal Merger Efficiency Fallacy

Paper Working Paper | | Aug 2023

By permitting business definitions of “efficiency” to leak over into the antitrust lexicon, antitrust scholars have done a great disservice

Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Antitrust Arguments “Chicago Style”

Article | Aug 17, 2023

ProMarket and the Consumer Welfare Standard An output increase is not sufficient to increase welfare. Allocation—how goods are distributed—matters.

Why Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals

Article | Dec 13, 2022

Despite the accumulation of serious and unsolvable problems, the Consumer Welfare Standard survives and continues to be taught to students for reasons unrelated to theoretical consistency and empirical confirmation.

Why Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals

Paper Working Paper | | Dec 2022

The Consumer Welfare Standard is severely limited or defective, preventing it from being an appropriate standard for modern antitrust.

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