Down the centuries social analysts have frequently charged, “Laws are like spiderwebs, which may catch small flies but let wasps and hornets break through.” As more and more corporations have been caught in the web of price-fixing laws, however, this charge has lost its punch. Senior business managers in industries that have never before known these problems, as well as previous offenders, are probably more concerned now about their corporate exposure to being indicted and convicted of price fixing than they were in any other recent period.

A version of this article appeared in the July 1978 issue of Harvard Business Review.