Thomas Hazlett, an H.H. Macaulay Endowed Professor in Economics, speaks on T-Mobile’s merger with Sprint in April 2020 and how it defied initial skepticism. Considering the merger between the two companies as pro-competitive rather than anti-competitive, he states how it reshaped the cellular network industry. Hazlett explains the success of the merger, how it benefits consumers and the potential for other efficient mergers in the future. Read the full article in The Wall Street Journal.
Gerald P. Dwyer, economics professor and BB&T Scholar examines the U.S. government's strategic value in holding significant amounts of bitcoin. […]
On April 15, 2024, the Information Economy Project Center hosted Virginia Postrel to give the Tullock Lecture on Big Ideas […]
The Information Economy Project at Clemson University is delighted to host one of America's most interesting thinkers and writers, Virginia […]