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Informationen zum Autor Thomas A. Lambert holds the Wall Family Chair in Corporate Law and Governance at the University of Missouri Law School. He is the author of more than twenty legal articles, mostly focused on regulation, and is co-author of a leading antitrust casebook. Klappentext Markets sometimes fail. But so do regulatory efforts to correct market failures. Sometimes regulations reach too far, condemning good activities as well as bad, and sometimes they don't reach far enough, allowing bad behavior to persist. In this highly instructive book, Thomas A. Lambert explains the pitfalls of both extremes while offering readers a manual of effective regulation, showing how the best regulation maximizes social welfare and minimizes social costs. Working like a physician, Lambert demonstrates how regulators should diagnose the underlying disease and identify its symptoms, potential remedies for it, and their side effects before selecting the regulation that offers the greatest net benefit. This book should be read by policymakers, students, and anyone else interested in understanding how the best regulations are crafted and why they work. Zusammenfassung The book is for readers hoping to move beyond pro- versus anti-regulation rhetoric and think seriously about when regulation is appropriate! what its potential downsides are! and what specific regulatory tools work best in different situations. The book assumes no prior knowledge of economics on behalf of the reader. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Defining our subject; 2. The overarching model; 3. The private ordering ideal; 4. Externalities; 5. Public (and quasi-public) goods; 6. Agency costs; 7. Market power; 8. Information asymmetry; 9. Cognitive limitations and behavioral quirks; Conclusion. Closing thoughts on open questions.