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The Constitution and Economic Regulation: Objective Theory and Critical Commentary by Michael Conant — book cover

The Constitution and Economic Regulation: Objective Theory and Critical Commentary

by Michael Conant
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Overview

This study uses basic economic analysis as a technique to comment critically on the original meaning and the interpretation of those clauses of the Constitution that have particular bearing on the economy. Many new conclusions are markedly different from those of the Supreme Court and earlier commentators. Conant's view is that the commerce clause and the equal protection clause, if they had been construed consistently with their comprehensive original meanings, would have given much greater federal protection against state laws that impaire free markets.

Economic policy for the nation was vested in Congress. To the extent that special interests could buy congressional favor for their anticompetitive activities, free markets were impaired within constraints as interpreted by the court. These decisions have been criticized for their failure to incorporate the antimonopoly tradition in the Ninth Amendment and their failure to recognize equal protection of laws incorporated into the Fifth Amendment. Conant holds that statutory controls of the economy are justifiable in economic theory if they are designed to remedy market failures and thereby increase efficiency. If statutes are passed to interfere with markets and create market inefficiencies for the benefit of special interest groups, they should be condemned under the standards of normative microeconomics. There are four main classes of market failure: monopoly, externalities, public goods, and informational asymmetry. This masterful analysis examines all four reasons for market failure in depth.

Litigation costs are analogous to transaction costs. If legal principles and rules are clearly and precisely defined by the Supreme Court when they are first appealed, litigation and its costs should be minimized. Conant claims that if legal principles or rules are uncertain because they lack definable standards, the number of legal actions filed and litigation costs will be much greater. This promotes additional litigation challenging the many statutes enacted to remedy asserted market failures in an expanding industrial economy. This work brilliantly addresses the danger to the economy in court rulings seeking to legislate standards of reasonableness.

Synopsis


This study uses basic economic analysis as a technique to comment critically on the original meaning and the interpretation of those clauses of the Constitution that have particular bearing on the economy. Many new conclusions are markedly different from those of the Supreme Court and earlier commentators. Conant's view is that the commerce clause and the equal protection clause, if they had been construed consistently with their comprehensive original meanings, would have given much greater federal protection against state laws that impaire free markets. Economic policy for the nation was vested in Congress. To the extent that special interests could buy congressional favor for their anticompetitive activities, free markets were impaired within constraints as interpreted by the court. These decisions have been criticized for their failure to incorporate the antimonopoly tradition in the Ninth Amendment and their failure to recognize equal protection of laws incorporated into the Fifth Amendment. Conant holds that statutory controls of the economy are justifiable in economic theory if they are designed to remedy market failures and thereby increase efficiency. If statutes are passed to interfere with markets and create market inefficiencies for the benefit of special interest groups, they should be condemned under the standards of normative microeconomics. There are four main classes of market failure: monopoly, externalities, public goods, and informational asymmetry. This masterful analysis examines all four reasons for market failure in depth. Litigation costs are analogous to transaction costs. If legal principles and rules are clearly and precisely defined by the Supreme Court when they are first appealed, litigation and its costs should be minimized. Conant claims that if legal principles or rules are uncertain because they lack definable standards, the number of legal actions filed and litigation costs will be much greater. This promotes additional litigation challenging the many statutes enacted to remedy asserted market failures in an expanding industrial economy. This work brilliantly addresses the danger to the economy in court rulings seeking to legislate standards of reasonableness.

About the Author, Michael Conant

Michael Conant is professor emeritus at Walter A. Haas School of Business at the University of California Berkeley. He is the author of Constitutional Structure and Purposes and The Constitution and the Economy: Objective Theory and Critical Commentary.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

“Outstanding Title! Conant (emer., University of California, Berkeley) offers an expansive view of the regulatory powers of the US Congress, as defined by the US Constitution, for correcting market failure (i.e., lack of competition, asymmetric information, externalities, and public goods). He argues that the framers' intent, as well as those who ratified subsequent amendments, was to provide Congress sufficient power to counter the narrow interests of the states and specific industries, (mostly) to promote market competition. Conant's argument is comprehensive and well-reasoned and -researched… [T]his is an important and extraordinary contribution to the debate on the proper role of government in facilitating market exchange. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduate through professional collections.” —M. Steckbeck, Choice "Michael Conant's The Constitution and Economic Regulation is an insightful, well researched book. I enjoyed it, and I think legal scholars, philosophers of science, and economists will read with delight." —Scott A. Beaulier, Stenson School of Business and Economics, Mercer University

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2008
Publisher
Transaction Publishers
Pages
324
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781412807746

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