asked 194k views
2 votes
Why were so few violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act brought to court? No businesses violated the law once it was put into place. Court cases took too much time and cost too much money. The Interstate Commerce Commission knew it wouldn’t win. The law was too unpopular with the general public.

2 Answers

2 votes

Court cases took too much time and cost too much money.

answered
User Lo Juego
by
8.1k points
1 vote

Answer:

Option B, Court cases cost too much time and money.

Step-by-step explanation:

A business practice rarely violated the Sherman Act and if it does so it is governed under the sub head “rule of reason”. Under this sub head if the trade is found to be violating the act due to unreasonable trade restraining such as are monopolies, tying, exclusive dealings, and price discrimination, then the trade is fined, sued, or broken up. Also the cost of fighting against the violations imposed is too high to mess with . Also the clearance time could extend up to years. Therefore violation becomes a costly affair

Hence, option B is correct

answered
User Paul Sweatte
by
8.7k points
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