Authors
Paolo Buccirossi, Catarina Marvão, Giancarlo Spagnolo
Publication date
2020/6/1
Journal
The Journal of Legal Studies
Volume
49
Issue
2
Pages
335-379
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Description
Damage actions may reduce leniency programs’ attractiveness for cartel participants if their cooperation with the competition authority increases the chance that the cartel’s victims will sue them. This apparent conflict between public and private antitrust enforcement led to calls for a legal compromise. We show that the conflict is due to the legislation, and a compromise is not required: limiting the victims’ ability to recover their losses is not necessary to preserve the effectiveness of leniency programs and may be counterproductive. We show that damage actions will improve their effectiveness if the civil liability of the immunity recipient is minimized and full access to all evidence collected by the competition authority is granted to claimants. Our results help compare the EU and US damage systems and directly question the 2014 EU directive that tries to protect leniency programs’ effectiveness by restricting access to …
Total citations
20152016201720182019202020212022202320243424365582
Scholar articles
P Buccirossi, C Marvão, G Spagnolo - The Journal of Legal Studies, 2020
C Marvão, G Spagnolo, P Buccirossi - 2016