RT Article T1 Cartels as "fraud"?: insights from collusion in southern and East Africa in the fertiliser and cement industries JF Capitalism and economic crime in Africa SP 37 OP 54 A1 Vilakazi, Thando A2 Roberts, Simon 1969- LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1918535183 AB Anti-competitive conduct involves firms misrepresenting their behaviour and manipulating markets. In sector case studies of cement and fertiliser, the authors find that collusion in southern and East Africa operated through industry associations exchanging information, secret agreements and lobbying government to distort notionally developmental policies for private benefit. This has occurred in the context of liberalisation and deregulation. Transnational corporations have leveraged control of infrastructure and inputs, and favourable regulations to sustain market power, while presenting themselves as ‘development partners’. Competition law is portrayed as the ‘governance fix’ for these issues but this ignores political economy issues which underpin many collusive arrangements. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 52-54 SN 9781032788272