Published on 17 July 2019
Share Share  Share

Video archive: Symposium on Competition Policy

Related topics

On the 17th of May 2019 a Symposium on Competition Policy was convened by Dr Flavio Toxvaerd (University of Cambridge) at Clare College Cambridge in partnership with The Bennett Institute for Public Policy, Cambridge University Faculty of Economics and the Institute for New Economic Thinking.

We are delighted to share with you this video archive of many of the speakers on the day, which include: Volker Nocke (University of Mannheim), Tomaso Duso (DIW, Berlin), Georges Siotis (Universidad Carlos III, Madrid), Amelia Fletcher (University of East Anglia), Diane Coyle (University of Cambridge) and Luís Cabral (New York University).

See the symposium programme and biographies here


Dr Flavio Toxvaerd | Introduction

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Volker Nocke (University of Mannheim) | Merger Remedies in Multimarket Oligopoly

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Tomaso Duso (DIW, Berlin) | Ex-post Evaluation of Competition Policy: Why and How?

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Georges Siotis (Universidad Carlos III, Madrid) | Market Definition in Pharma

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Amelia Fletcher (University of East Anglia) | The EU Google Decisions: Extreme Enforcement or the Tip of the Behavioral Iceberg?

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Diane Coyle (University of Cambridge) | Competition Challenges in Digital Platform Markets

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


Luís Cabral (New York University) | Innovation under Asymmetric Oligopoly: Theory, Empirical Evidence, and Policy Implications

This content embed has been blocked due to your cookie options. Allow embed cookies and refresh this page to view it.


The views and opinions expressed in this post are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the Bennett Institute for Public Policy.