Organizing Institutions The workshop was organized by the OECD–Korea Policy Centre (KPC) in collaboration with the Malaysian Competition Commission (MyCC). Venue and Dates Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (28–29 October 2025). CCP Representation The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) was represented by: Ms. Saira Israr, Economist Key Themes and Discussions The workshop focused on competition issues in the food supply chain, including cartels, buyer power, and market concentration. It covered investigative tools, use of digital evidence, interim measures, and remedies in competition enforcement. Discussions addressed emerging risks related to digital platforms and joint ventures. The program also highlighted the importance of cross-border coordination among competition. International Participation Participants attended from Europe, Egypt, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Mongolia, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Africa, Japan, South Korea, and Türkiye. Key Takeaways for CCP The workshop enhanced CCP’s technical capacity to detect and address anti-competitive practices in essential commodity markets, particularly food supply chains. It strengthened understanding of modern investigative techniques and evidence-based case building. The program improved CCP’s capacity for proactive market monitoring and enforcement. It also fostered opportunities for international cooperation and knowledge exchange.
The workshop was organized by the OECD–Korea Policy Centre (KPC) in collaboration with the Malaysian Competition Commission (MyCC).
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (28–29 October 2025).
The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) was represented by:
Ms. Saira Israr, Economist
The workshop focused on competition issues in the food supply chain, including cartels, buyer power, and market concentration.
It covered investigative tools, use of digital evidence, interim measures, and remedies in competition enforcement.
Discussions addressed emerging risks related to digital platforms and joint ventures.
The program also highlighted the importance of cross-border coordination among competition.
Participants attended from Europe, Egypt, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Mongolia, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Africa, Japan, South Korea, and Türkiye.
The workshop enhanced CCP’s technical capacity to detect and address anti-competitive practices in essential commodity markets, particularly food supply chains.
It strengthened understanding of modern investigative techniques and evidence-based case building.
The program improved CCP’s capacity for proactive market monitoring and enforcement.
It also fostered opportunities for international cooperation and knowledge exchange.
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