By Erik Hovenkamp (University of Southern California) & Jorge Lemus (University Of Illinois)
Patent settlements between rivals restrain competition in many different ways. Antitrust requires that their anticompetitive effects are reasonably commensurate with the firms’ expectations about (counterfactual) patent litigation. Because these expectations are private and non-verifiable, this standard is hard to administer; to date, it has been successfully applied only within a very narrow class of agreements. We show that it can be applied universally by policing the economic structure of the firms’ contract. This approach determines whether settlement outcomes will be antitrust-compliant for any private beliefs the firms might have, thus avoiding the need to speculate about such beliefs.