cover image: Cartels, Antitrust Enforcement, and Industry Performance : Evidence from Mexico (English)

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Cartels, Antitrust Enforcement, and Industry Performance : Evidence from Mexico (English)

22 Dec 2022

Forty percent of economic activities in Mexico weighed by sales have been investigated for illegal monopolistic practices since the Federal Competition Commission was established in 1993. By exploiting some unique features of the Mexican investigative system, and using a synthetic control approach, this paper examines the causal impact of antitrust sanctions on industry performance and aggregate outcomes. Sanctions cause sales and wages to increase and profit margins to fall in the sanctioned sectors, thus benefiting consumers and workers. Overall, antitrust enforcement contributes roughly half a percent of per capita gross domestic product growth. Outcomes of investigations that are closed without sanction fail to reject the hypothesis that some harmful conduct is not sanctioned because investigators lack resources to prove it conclusively. An implication is that the Commission could generate greater benefits with additional investigative resources.
mexico competition law competition policy latin america & caribbean competition policy and growth competition agency effectiveness

Authors

Reed,Tristan, Pereira Lopez,Mariana De La Paz, Urrutia Arrieta,Ana Francisca, Iacovone,Leonardo

DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10269
Disclosure Date
2022/12/22
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Cartels, Antitrust Enforcement, and Industry Performance : Evidence from Mexico
Product Line
Research Activity
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
MX-Impacts Of The Federal Competition Commission-2212402 -- P179914
Series Name
Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 10269; Impact Evaluation series; Paper is funded by the Knowledge for Change Program (KCP);
Unit Owning
DECRG: Macroeconomics & Growth (DECMG),EFI-ECA-FCI-Finance-1 (EECF1),EFI-LCR-MTI-MacroFiscal (ELCMU)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

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