During the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve seen companies collaborating on some great ideas. Companies should keep in mind, however, that the antitrust laws still apply and those who don’t follow them may pay dearly later.
In the first of a three-part series about antitrust and consumer protection during COVID-19, host Jay Levine talks to Porter Wright attorney Allen Carter about how companies can collaborate during the current crisis, what business owners should do to protect themselves and how the government is helping and what it is watching out for.
The next podcast in this series will discuss price gouging and hoarding, how federal and state governments protect consumers and what companies need to know to protect their business.
Capper Volstead: Past, present and future – Part 3
Capper Volstead: Past, present and future – Part 2
Capper Volstead: Past, present and future – Part 1
FTC starts 2023 with a bang
Government is cracking down on antitrust issues in labor markets
A new year of fresh challenges: Antitrust highlights from Q1 2022
The Antitrust Revolution: New Brandeisians Keep Their Promise
Antitrust Lessons from NCAA vs. Alston
The Antitrust Revolution: The Chicago School and Antitrust Enforcement from 1990s to the Present
The Antitrust Revolution: The Evolution of Antitrust
Breaking Down the NCAA v. Alston SCOTUS Decision
The outlook for startups and emerging businesses
COVID-19’s impact on the Health Care Industry
Ohio’s COVID-19 qualified immunity legislation
NCAA’s legal woes: Antitrust challenges from student-athletes continue
Antitrust during COVID-19 Part 3: Planning for the future
Antitrust during COVID-19 Part 2: Price gouging and hoarding of supplies
Regulation of cryptocurrency
What does it take to bring foreign companies to the US?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Commercial Edge: Unleash the Power of People
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Aligned Money Show
Gorse Culture PODcast : The H.R. Detective Agency!
HCI Leadership Revolution
The Ramsey Show
Planet Money