The American Antitrust Institute (AAI) is a Washington-based non-profit education, research, and advocacy organization. The AAI advocates for more aggressive antitrust enforcement by the federal government.
Founded in April, 1998, AAI is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt Washington, D.C., corporation. The AAI is funded through contributions from a wide variety of law firms, economics consulting firms, corporations, trade associations, and individuals, with substantial support from cy pres grants approved by courts in antitrust cases.
The President of the AAI is Albert A. Foer. Governance rests in a five-person Board of Directors. The AAI has more than 100 individual members of an Advisory Board [1] including many international advisors.
The AAI is known for calling on the federal government to investigate or block mergers that the Institute deems as anticompetitive and harmful to consumers.
In 2008, the AAI celebrated its 10th anniversary. The AAI published a history [2] of the organization’s first ten years summarizes its amicus briefs, conferences. Also in 2008, the AAI presented a full statement of its position to the Obama administration titled The Next Antitrust Agenda: The American Antitrust Institute’s Transition Report on Competition Policy to the 44th President [3].