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cartel (n.)

1550s, "a written challenge, letter of defiance," from French cartel (16c.), from Italian cartello "placard," diminutive of carta "card" (see card (n.1)).

It came to mean "written agreement between states at war" (1690s), for the exchange of prisoners or some other mutual advantage, then "a written agreement between challengers" of any sort (1889). The sense of "a commercial trust, an association of industrialists" is from 1900, via German Kartell, which is from French. The older U.S. term for that is trust (n.). The usual German name for them was Interessengemeinschaft, abbreviated IG.

https://www.etymonline.com/word/cartel

I can see why the German term didn’t catch on.

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1 sat \ 0 replies \ @Fenix 4h

Portuguese definition has those and this too:

A cooperation agreement between companies seeking to maintain their market production quotas, setting prices and limiting competition.
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The SN Cartel

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