Competition policy 2024

Competition policy 2024
21
November 2024 — 10:00AM TO 6:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
19 July 2024
Chatham House

Join us to explore emerging themes in competition policy from evolving investigation and enforcement capabilities to merger controls and the digital economy.

This conference, hosted in-person and held under the Chatham House Rule, explores emerging themes in competition policy from evolving investigation and enforcement capabilities to merger controls and the digital economy.

New tools for an evolving landscape

The competition policy landscape continues to evolve rapidly. Against the backdrop of shifting geopolitical dynamics and rising protectionism, competition authorities and antitrust regulators must navigate the increasing influence of non-competition factors such as economic security policies and trade objectives. This context is complicated further with the disruptive influence and rapid advances of technological innovation such as Artificial Intelligence (AI).

While authorities and regulators demand new tools and capabilities to effectively enforce emerging regulatory regimes, international businesses and investors face fresh challenges in navigating more complex compliance requirements across antitrust, merger controls, FDI, foreign subsidies and digital markets regimes.

This conference, hosted in-person and held under the Chatham House Rule, explores emerging themes in competition policy from evolving investigation and enforcement capabilities to merger controls and the digital economy.

Why attend?

  • Gain insight into evolving investigations and enforcement capabilities across jurisdictions and what they mean for investment.  
  • Hear from leading regulators on key recent developments within digital markets and beyond.
  • Explore the implications of recent elections and geopolitical competition for global economic dynamics and competition policy.
  • Network with international competition authorities and anti-trust regulators and engage in best practice relating to competition policy. 

Source: Chathamhouse Events