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Another Anti-Trust Tradition: Canadian Anti-Combines Policy, 1889–1910

Michael Bliss

Business History Review, 1973, vol. 47, issue 2, 177-188

Abstract: Professor Bliss suggests that the Canadian anti-trust tradition was much more similar to the British experience than to the policies adopted in the United States. At no time, he argues, did Canadian legislation significantly expand the common law prohibition of undue or unreasonable restraints of trade, and the few prosecutions after 1900 had no significant effect in inhibiting the thrust of business resistance to market forces.

Date: 1973
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