This article addresses how the rules intended to protect consumers and taxpayers from economic crime, namely leniency and cartel settlements in competition law, criminal sanctions and debarment of suppliers from participation in public tenders for bribery, work together. While the economic reasoning behind these rules makes sense when considering each one of them in isolation, their impact is weakened when they are opposing each other. Competition authorities are narrowly mandated to control competition, and they do not seek out corruption. For criminal law investigators problems are created if they interfere (because it would undermine the leniency program); conversely, there are problems if they stay away (because that would undermine enf...
The paper focuses on the theory and practice of antitrust action in detecting and deterring cartels ...
We analyze significant challenges and pitfalls faced by antitrust authorities in the implementation ...
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...
This article addresses how the rules intended to protect consumers and taxpayers from economic crime...
By combining approaches from the economic theory of crime and of industrial organization, this paper...
This article shows the limitations to the optimal deterrence-inspired cartel enforcement policy curr...
This article is the first to analyze whether cartel sanctions are optimal. The conventional wisdom i...
Leniency policies offering immunity to the first cartel member that blows the whistle and self-repor...
Competition law seeks to foster competition and innovation through the sanctioning of antitrust beha...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the trend towards the criminalization of har...
The most significant violation of antitrust law in industrial economics is cartel formation. A price...
The present assessment focuses on the antitrust action in detecting and fighting oligopolistic collu...
Cartels remain widespread and constitute a major problem for society. Leniency policies reduce or ca...
There has been a proliferation of jurisdictions across the world seeking to use criminal sanctions ...
Cartels, or secret agreements between competitors, are universally recognized as the most harmful of...
The paper focuses on the theory and practice of antitrust action in detecting and deterring cartels ...
We analyze significant challenges and pitfalls faced by antitrust authorities in the implementation ...
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...
This article addresses how the rules intended to protect consumers and taxpayers from economic crime...
By combining approaches from the economic theory of crime and of industrial organization, this paper...
This article shows the limitations to the optimal deterrence-inspired cartel enforcement policy curr...
This article is the first to analyze whether cartel sanctions are optimal. The conventional wisdom i...
Leniency policies offering immunity to the first cartel member that blows the whistle and self-repor...
Competition law seeks to foster competition and innovation through the sanctioning of antitrust beha...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the trend towards the criminalization of har...
The most significant violation of antitrust law in industrial economics is cartel formation. A price...
The present assessment focuses on the antitrust action in detecting and fighting oligopolistic collu...
Cartels remain widespread and constitute a major problem for society. Leniency policies reduce or ca...
There has been a proliferation of jurisdictions across the world seeking to use criminal sanctions ...
Cartels, or secret agreements between competitors, are universally recognized as the most harmful of...
The paper focuses on the theory and practice of antitrust action in detecting and deterring cartels ...
We analyze significant challenges and pitfalls faced by antitrust authorities in the implementation ...
Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard both to find and...