Margaret Levenstein, Valerie Suslow, Nov 05, 2010
Antitrust authorities around the world have continued to pursue illegal price-fixing throughout the economic crisis, but have also increasingly granted “inability to pay” reductions in fines. While taking ability to pay into account is appropriate, as the overriding policy goal is the promotion of competition, these reductions in fines must be accompanied by other policy changes in order to maintain the expected level of sanction. Granting inability to pay requests for reductions in fines is an ex-post decision on the part of antitrust authorities, and yet it clearly has ex-ante incentive implications for cartel formation. These fine reductions also have the potential to undermine the legitimacy and credibility of the antitrust authorities, and therefore must be implemented with specific, objective, and transparent criteria. To assure the effectiveness of anti-cartel policy, we should design policies that are informed by empirical research.
Featured News
Republican State Attorneys General Urge Federal Review of Union Pacific–Norfolk Southern Merger
Feb 17, 2026 by
CPI
Redfin and Zillow Press Court to Dismiss FTC Antitrust Suit
Feb 17, 2026 by
CPI
European Commission Launches DSA Investigation into Shein Over Illegal Products
Feb 17, 2026 by
CPI
British Government Vows Changes to Toughen Children’s Online Safety Laws
Feb 17, 2026 by
CPI
Warner Bros Discovery Gives Paramount One Week to Improve $30-Per-Share Bid as Netflix Deal Advances
Feb 17, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Hub-&-Spoke Conspiracies
Jan 26, 2026 by
CPI
A Data Analytics Company as the Hub in a Hub-and-Spoke Cartel
Jan 26, 2026 by
Joseph Harrington
Hub and Spoke Cartels
Jan 26, 2026 by
Patrick Van Cayseele
Hub-and-Spoke Collusion or Vertical Exclusion? Identifying the Rim in Hub-and-Spoke Conspiracies
Jan 26, 2026 by
Rosa Abrantes-Metz, Pedro Gonzaga, Laura Ildefonso & Albert Metz
The Algorithmic Middleman in a Hub-and-Spoke Conspiracy: Divergent Court Decisions and the Expanding Patchwork of State and Local Regulations
Jan 26, 2026 by
Bradley C. Weber