Elisa Mariscal, Carlos Mena-Labarthe, Nov 05, 2010
The fight against cartels has become a central feature for many competition agencies. In Latin America, this fight is long overdue as the prevalence of cartels has historically harmed competition in both large and small markets. The introduction of immunity and leniency programs to fight hard-core cartels is an important challenge for many authorities in the region. They have to garner the necessary expertise to administer these programs, increasingly join and even cooperate with their international counterparts, and learn the nuances in their legal systems when implementing them and enforcing their competition legislation. Nonetheless, these programs have proven to be extremely effective, low-cost tools that have uncovered a number of cartels in a relatively short period of time.
Featured News
Sources Report Glimmers of Progress in Talks to Resolve Conflicts Over Crypto Market Structure Bill
Jan 9, 2026 by
CPI
CFTC Certifies First Crypto-Native Exchange as a Designated Contract Market
Jan 9, 2026 by
CPI
Glencore and Rio Tinto in Talks Over Deal That Could Create $260 Billion Mining Giant
Jan 8, 2026 by
CPI
Google, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Netflix Set to Avoid Tough EU Curbs: Report
Jan 8, 2026 by
CPI
EU Antitrust Review of Google-Wiz Deal Draws Intense Scrutiny Ahead of 2026 Deadline
Jan 8, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – CRESSE Insights
Dec 16, 2025 by
CPI
Learning from Divergence: The Role of Cross-Country Comparisons in the Evaluation of the DMA
Dec 16, 2025 by
Federico Bruni
New Regulatory Tools for the EU Foreign Direct Investment Screening and Foreign Subsidies Regulation
Dec 16, 2025 by
Ioannis Kokkoris
“Suite Dreams”: Market Definition and Complementarity in the Digital Age
Dec 16, 2025 by
Romain Bizet & Matteo Foschi
The Interaction Between Competition Policy and Consumer Protection: Institutional Design, Behavioral Insights, and Emerging Challenges in Digital Markets
Dec 16, 2025 by
Alessandra Tonazzi