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Pharmaceutical Economics begins with an investigation of the
structure of the industry and its three main components: the
research firms which produce innovative products; the generic drug
industry and its expanding role; and the biotech industry, which is
regarded as the future for pharmaceuticals. Further sections
discuss topics including demand and incentives, pricing and
regulation. Professor Comanor and Professor Schweitzer have
selected the most significant articles by leading academics, in
order to offer a blend of standard economic interpretations of
pharmaceutical policy and important new topics including
biosimilars, insurance coverage for pharmaceuticals, price-fixing
and direct-to-consumer advertising. An authoritative new
introduction by the editors provides an insightful guide to these
important topics.
International agreements on competition law and policy are
notoriously difficult to implement. This collection examines the
complexities involved when international co-ordination and
harmonization of competition law and policy are considered.
Presenting an analysis of the issues surrounding co-operation and
convergence, a number of key factors are examined. These include
the impact of differing anti-trust laws across borders on trade and
investment, the effects on competition policy of international
strategic alliances, mergers and acquisitions, the trade-off
between firm privacy and antitrust needs in co-ordinating
information flow across borders. The final section of the book
addresses major policy themes in the context of how to proceed in
the future.
The delinquent payment of child support by non-custodial to
custodial parents is a major problem throughout the United States.
To many observers, the problem is one of 'deadbeat dads' - men who
simply will not make the required payments. The solution has been
to enforce payment by the imposition of increasingly stringent
civil and criminal penalties. Despite these efforts, the percentage
of single mothers receiving child support has changed very little
over the past twenty-five years. The Law and Economics of Child
Support Payments investigates why this is, and approaches the
payment of child support as an economic problem. To understand the
issues involved, leading lawyers and economists examine various
facets of the child support system from a law and economics
perspective. They consider the incentives faced by both custodial
and non-custodial parents, and search for policy actions that are
more incentive-compatible for all participants. The assumptions
underlying current child support guidelines are discussed, as are
the ways in which child support payments affect family structure,
teenage delinquency and income disparities between parents. This
comprehensive, provocative volume will be of considerable interest
to policymakers, lawyers and parent advocacy groups, as well as to
students of this timely issue.
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