Report
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Australia’s creation in 2009 of criminal cartel offenses — and threat of up to 10 years in jail for offending executives — promised to change the game for the country's antitrust enforcer, struggling to investigate collusion and make civil penalties a credible deterrent. But a decade on, the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission has yet to bag its first individual convictions, an essential for the deterrent to work.
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The pandemic forced countries worldwide to rejig antitrust, M&A and state subsidy policies. What has been the effect, and where are the new rules likely to endure?
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The US After EU judges struck down the Privacy Shield data-transfer agreement, what’s next for US tech giants, thousands of other companies and regulatory regimes around the world?Department of Justice has pressed the button on its landmark antitrust lawsuit against the search giant.
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Australia’s struggle to secure its first criminal cartel convictions — and make jail time a deterrent at last
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The US Department of Justice has pressed the button on its landmark antitrust lawsuit against the search giant.