Why Does Congress Let the Ivy League Operate as a Monopoly? ...Middle East

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In a unanimous decision last month, the Supreme Court ruled that universities’ long-standing practice of colluding through the NCAA to limit education-related financial benefits for college athletes violated antitrust laws. “The NCAA is not above the law,” declared Justice Brett Kavanaugh in his widely praised concurrence. It is not widely known, however, that Congress and the executive branch have allowed the eight colleges belonging to the Ivy League to circumvent antitrust laws by apparently agreeing to limit the amount of aid deserving students can receive. Section 568 of the Higher Education Act, in place for decades, effectively makes it harder for sought-after students—particularly st

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