Lexicographical Neighbors of Cartelised
Literary usage of Cartelised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Regulatory Reform in Denmark by Oecd (2000)
"High prices are particularly seen for non-traded goods in cartelised and highly
regulated sectors. ..."
2. Fighting Hard-core Cartels: Harm, Effective Sanctions and Leniency Programmes by Oecd (2002)
"Cartels that successfully reduce output and raise price above the competitive
level cause consumers, collectively, to purchase less of the cartelised ..."
3. Trade and Competition, from Doha to Cancún by (Paris) Organisation for Economic Co-ope, OECD Staff (2003)
"... effect on developing economies: by a variety of means they can inhibit new
entry, by both foreign and domestic firms, into the cartelised markets. ..."
4. The Protest Ethic: How the Anti-globalisation Movement Challenges Social by John Lloyd (2001)
"... than they were in more stable — that is, more cartelised and protected — times.
When times are hard, corporations are much more fragile than states. ..."
5. Urbanisation: South Africa's Challenge by Derik Gelderblom, Pieter Kok (1994)
"This may partly be ascribed to the fact that "the building materials industry is
highly cartelised and monopolised" (Swilling 1990a:3l). ..."
6. Using Knowledge for Development: The Brazilian Experience by Oecd, Claudio Frischtak (2001)
"In less than a decade Brazil has become a more open and competitive economy,
where cartelised or non-competitive arrangements to supply domestic markets ..."
7. Hard Core Cartels: Recent Progress and Challenges Ahead by Oecd (2003)
"Consumers (which include businesses and governments) choose either not to pay
the higher price for some or all of the cartelised product that they desire, ..."
8. Regulatory Reform in Ireland by Scott H. Jacobs (2001)
"However, the study could not distinguish between local markets of solicitors
being competitive or cartelised. ..."