Coronavirus Updates

About the Conference


In 2017, the Stigler Center embarked on an ambitious project to reinvigorate the discussion of concentration and monopoly in the United States, culminating in the conference Is There a Concentration Problem in America? In 2018, the Center brought together scholars and experts to consider digital platforms specifically. From the 2018 conference a consensus emerged that the issues raised by these platforms must be addressed, and—to provide independent expertise on potential policy responses—the Center formed a Committee for the Study of Digital Platforms and organized its 2019 conference on Digital Platforms, Markets and Democracy: A Path Forward.

While there has been progress in studying the political impact of social media and digital platform concentration, political considerations have become increasingly relevant also in the wider study of market concentration. Yet the relationship between market concentration and undesirable political outcomes remains unclear and should be further analyzed.

Thus, the first goal of the conference is to explore whether these links exist and what form they take. Second, U.S. antitrust was born also to restrain the excessive concentration of political power. Over the years, this goal has been eliminated from the antitrust practice. Should we now create a separate political antitrust? If so, how could it be administered to avoid arbitrariness? To explore these topics, the Stigler Center is dedicating its fourth annual antitrust and competition conference to Monopolies and Politics.

**In accordance with University guidance on COVID-19 and for the safety of our community, and in the spirit of continuing to promote and disseminate research, we will be holding the conference virtually in a series of free webinars from Spring 2020 - Winter 2021.**


Winter 2021 Webinars 


Fall 2020 Webinars


Spring 2020 Webinars


Conference Organizers

  • Luigi Zingales, Robert C. McCormack Distinguished Service Professor of Entrepreneurship and Finance & Charles M. Harper Faculty Fellow, University of Chicago Booth School of Business
  • Guy Rolnik, Clinical Professor of Strategic Management, University of Chicago Booth School of Business
  • Filippo Lancieri, JSD Candidate, University of Chicago Law School; Research Fellow, Stigler Center, University of Chicago Booth School of Business

For more information, contact:

Sebastian Burca, Associate Director, Stigler Center
773.834.2054
sebastian.burca@chicagobooth.edu