Antitrust laws may unintentionally facilitate collusion among firms.
The article discusses how antitrust laws can actually help firms collude by making it costly to do so, acting as a signal for firms to form agreements. This means that even when firms can't tacitly collude, they may still be able to explicitly collude if the cost is right. The research shows that there is always a cost level at which explicit collusion becomes viable, and that antitrust enforcement may not completely prevent collusion.