SCOTUS Case May End Sale Prices 527
An anonymous reader writes "If you own a mom & pop store and can't get rid of some of your inventory, you can always clear out some shelf space by holding a sale. If the Supreme Court sides with business interests in a case they heard today, however, such sales may no longer be possible. Since 1911 it has been illegal for manufacturers to force retailers into setting a price floor for products — individual retailers get to decide how much they sell products for. But today the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case seeking to overturn this longstanding rule. Should the Court do so, it would drive up consumer prices across the board. This case is particularly salient in the era of Internet shopping: consumers are now easily able to shop around to multiple retailers to find the best price. The Court could wipe out this advantage." From the article: "Should the Court abandon the... rule against minimum resale price maintenance... it would send a signal that the Roberts Court will continue to narrow the application of the antitrust laws and that the Court may disregard settled precedent and Congressional will in other areas of the law as well."
Isn't this the definition of the Free Market? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Isn't this the definition of the Free Market? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Seriously. Stop imagining conspiracies of collusion between cutthroat competitors. For example, suppliers today *could* collude to aggressively collect on unpaid accounts, and put the screws to mom-and-pops. But they don't, because it would drive business into the arms of suppliers who don't. If SCOTUS rules in favor of this silly idea, it would be no different. A few wholesalers may decide to act like imperious assholes, but
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You're forgetting about cost of entry. If the top 3 x86 chip vendors started colluding, the market wouldn't respond because the costs involved in designing and manufacturing a fast x86 chip are stupendous. Intel/AMD/etc would damn near have to withdraw their products from the market to stimulate competition and it'd still take years for the newly founded company to catch up.
Markets aren't perfect at all, that's why they'
*Imagining*? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2002-09-3
http://www.engadget.com/2007/03/21/sony-others-na
http://news.com.com/Samsung+to+pay+300+million+fo
http://illinoisissuesblog.blogspot.com/2007/03/pr
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2002/May-0
http://www.powells.com/biblio?PID=28734&cgi=produ
What's more, you don't have to spend long in today's business culture before it becomes *obvious* that there's enough of a critical mass of actors who believe in getting ahead by amassing control over channels and perception (rather than producing/adding value) that the emergence of price-fixing behavior is practically inevitable.
This impacts botique items the most (Score:2, Insightful)
Ditto vendors who have a lock on their product, such as Microsoft. As it is, it's very difficult to find MS-Windows below MSRP. Under these rules, it would be impossible.
Re:This impacts botique items the most (Score:4, Funny)
You've never heard of BitTorrent, have you?
Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopolies (Score:3, Informative)
I would simply stop stocking any product that forced me to sell at price higher than the market could bear.
This is one of those areas where government regulation protects you. Another area of regulation will make sure you are screwed even worse if this regulation is removed.
Let's imagine they have their way. You can stop selling stuff that's over priced, but you would still be stuck with it. Right now, you can reduce the price to recover part of the money you wasted on something you thought would sel
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:5, Insightful)
That same Adam Smith is the same Adam Smith who is the origin of pretty much everything that has historically been considered a free market.
In Smith's day state monopolies were a common means of raising revenue. Smith demonstrated that such restraints on trade have hidden costs that are much greater than were imagined at the time. The cost of the tax is much greater than the amount paid raised in revenue.
In libertopia they do things differently of course, the only evil that can ever exist in libertopia is the result of people consipiring together through the government. The fact that a large corporation has a similar coercive power to government is inconvenient ideologically and is thus ignored.
Nothing is going to happen here. At worst the SCOTUS redefine the interpretation of the anti-trust acts. But that might well be the best outcome long term for consumers since if Congress revisits price maintenance agreements making them explicitly illegal they wil probably act on advertised price maintenance as well.
I don't see an argument being made that prohibiting retail price maintenace is unconstitutional. Even though many members of SCOTUS are notorious partisan hacks I don't see that as being very likely.
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:5, Informative)
It's pretty clear from context that when Smith says "corporation" here, he means what'd we'd call a guild or an industry association. An organization which everyone in the industry was compelled to join and which had the power to regulate the business activities of everyone engaging in the trade. More like the AMA than, say, Microsoft or Google. Smith was not arguing for government antitrust regulation, but rather for governments to avoid mandating or encouraging industry self-regulation.
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:4, Insightful)
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Big distributor: You soooo want my product. But if I'm going to enter into a deal with you to sell it, you're only allowed to sell if for $99.
Retailer: I wanna sell it for $95. It'll do better in my store that way.
Big distributor: And yet, here I am, requiring $99.
At this point, the ret
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If a mugger points a gun at me and says "your money or your life", and I choose to give him my money instead of my life, that is in some sense a voluntary act. I could have just decided to live (brieflly) with the consequences of doing otherwise; but being robbed seems like a better deal than being killed, so I'd choose that instead. But we still call that coercion, and choices made thus are, in a very
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:4, Interesting)
I have a counterproposal.
All corporations shall be disbanded and remade as co-ops.
Each co-op shall be divided into a number of shares of equal size which shall be equal to the number of employees. Any employee hired to such a corporation shall have the opportunity to spend any percentage of their wage on their share. They are entitled to profit sharing (if any) based on a percentage of their share. Upon leaving they may trade their share to another employee for any consideration with which they are comfortable, with the exception that no employee may own more than one share.
All co-ops shall be democratic entities with each employee being entitled to vote their share or any owned fraction thereof. Shares (and fractional shares) are tallied to determine the outcome.
We have a constitution that [ostensibly] guarantees us certain protections and standards, and then we give these protections and standards up and effectively become a serf when we go to work. Why should this be the case?
With apologies to Kim Stanley Robinson, and those from whom he derived his ideas.
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:4, Insightful)
It is true that colonialism was, on the whole, more harmful than beneficial to those formal colonies which are now independent nations. However, it is also true to say that not everything about colonialism was necessarily a bad thing. The railroads, port facilities, and other colonial improvements made by the British throughout their former empire, notably in India, were reverted to the ownership of the newly independent nations and that windfall of improved infrastructure did partly compensate for the less desirable effects of colonialism in that the new nations began with something of a head start with regard to roads, ports, government buildings, railroads and the like.
However, even when the negative effects are accounted for, and most nations are now 50 years out from their colonial pasts, it does not fully explain why these now independent nations have failed to seize the day and produce for their citizens 50 years of economic growth and progress that was, in theory at least, possible once the colonialism ended.
In fact, modern third-world governments do a fine job of protecting property rights - of multinational corporations. It's actual citizens who lose out.
I would compare this with the dictator offering a good friend or family member, or indeed a foreigner with money to spend, special privileges that fall outside of the laws of that country or not covered by those laws because of the power of the dictator. This is not the same thing as an impartial and independent judiciary enforcing the private property rights of multinational corporations within the framework of the rule of laws. It should not therefore be used as an argument against the efficacy of protecting property rights in per se since it it in fact nothing more than the will of the dictator dressed up in words like "protecting the legitimate property rights", "freedom", and "democracy".
Then property becomes a tool for hoarding the resources of the planet, for concentrating control of capital into the hands of a state-backed owning and ruling class, then we need to realize that ideas that can usefully be applied to guitars, cannot necessarily be usefully applied to large tracts of land, natural resources, or ideas - and certainly not to shares in control of, and profit from, the actions of immortal fictitious citizens created by government fiat.
I suppose that this simply comes down to a basic disagreement on the means to best achieve the same goals. We both of us agree that we would like to own some land with a dwelling and perhaps a car and other personal possessions and amenities of our choosing, but we disagree on the best means to achieve those goals. If you believe that everyone should have an equal share of a smaller total pie then by all means vote for government control of markets and capital and we will all be equal in our misery. On the other hand if you believe in yourself and the rights of yourself in others to invest your capital in business and to work to increase that capital without the government swooping in and confiscating the fruits of your labor at whim then you should not be against the sort of concentration of capital that tends to occur in the later rather than the former system. If private property works for your guitar then why should it not work equally well for say generation of electricity or steel or other more "vital" industries, what Lenin called, the "Commanding Heights" of the economy? The answer is that it does and should not therefore be restricted. In fact, the only industry where the government should maintain complete monopsony [wikipedia.org] control is in the defense industry. The history of the twentieth century proved these assertions conclusively with the collapse of communism and the abandonment by China of any pretense of Marxist economic policies.
Mistaking property
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:5, Interesting)
Large online clearinghouses benefit from this.
Local bookstores for example are starting to massively suffer from online competition. Customers walk in, browse, leave and order the book from amazon.com for 10-20% less. How do you combat this? Retail cannot lower their prices to the same level online companies can -- they have prime real-estate leases vs a warehouse in some grungy commercial district. They deal in hundreds of books per week in stead of per hour, etc, etc.
The proposed legislation prevents amazon.com from lowering the price of the books to less than the retailers can survive.
I don't know if that is a good idea, but I do think *something* needs to be done to protect retail. Retail is not an obsolete business model - online sales would suffer too if we couldn't kick the tires at retail. The issue here isn't that retail is 'obsolete', its that retail has to figure out how to make money from customrs who just come in to browse and try things on.
Would you pay 'cover' to get into a retail store? Would you pay a sales person even if you didn't buy something. ie... the bookstore or shoestore could lower their prices and compete with amazon if you paid $20 dollars at the door just to get into the store. There'd be no incentive to buy online as the price in the store would be the same. You could still avoid going into the store, and just buy online directly, and save money, but you lose out on the chance to browse etc.
Essentially, retail and online provide the same final product. retail costs more because of the extra service of bringing the inventory close to you, and having staff available to work with you with it. Retail needs to figure out how to get paid for that component because whats going on right now is that people use the retail outlet to decide what to buy, and then buy it online.
Or put another way online retailers are basically letting retail to all work, and bear all the costs, of making the sale, while swiping the actual transaction because their prices are cheaper. Right now retail bundles the cost of making the sale into the product, and are losing out to online competition who don't have that cost.
Retail needs to unbundle that cost, so they can offer the same product for the same price as online, while somehow charging directly for the service of letting you play with it, try it on, decide what to buy, etc.
Its sort of a bizarre model, but I can't see a better solution. regulated minimum pricing doesn't strike me as a solution.
As online shopping grows other markets will be hit by this, like sports equipment (runners (Nike/Addidas/Reebok), weights, skis, etc), electronics, designer clothing, etc. In fact pretty much anything where you can look at the product (at retail) to gauge its fit/quality/comfort/whatever and then order online and expect to receive an identical product.
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:5, Interesting)
Offer better services ranging from knowledgeable clerks to coffee bars to author signings to small concerts certain nights of the week.
Or maybe the local bookstore's days are at an end. It hardly seems worthy of laws or court actions. Times change. We all adapt or end.
Except that consumers disagree. (Score:5, Insightful)
What's your point?
People vote with their wallets every day, and they've pretty clearly indicated that they don't value these type of establishments, in most cases, enough to pay their premiums. The "value added" in other words, of the local butcher, just isn't enough to most people, to cover the increase in cost versus prepackaged meat from the megamart.
I'm sorry that you don't like the way it's worked out -- and if it helps, I agree with you, and I refuse to shop at Walmart (or Target, or Home Depot) when there's an alternative -- but I think it's fundamentally wrong to try and keep obsolete businesses alive at a direct cost to consumers who have clearly voted with their feet and their wallets and said they're not interested. That's at best regressive, and at worst tyrannical.
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Right now, people can have both. They can go to the boutique to speak to knowledgeable staff, try the product, etc. Then they go home and google the best price. Trouble is, the boutique doesn't get compensated in this transaction, despite having rendered the superior service.
This has always been an issue, as the boutiques already compete with the walmart's, costco's, and the bestbuy's who'll under cu
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:5, Insightful)
If I browse in a bookstore and find something interesting I am very likely to buy it right there and then, because I'm excited by it. I'm not thinking about how I could order it online for less because I want to read it now. I don't want to wait a few days while Amazon packs it and sends it to me, and maybe it's not in stock at Amazon and I'll have to wait a week or more.
If I am going out on the town tonight and I need new shoes I don't have the luxury of waiting while some online store delivers them to me.
Maybe there are people who plan all their purchases days or weeks in advance, but for a large number of people most small to medium purchases are done on impulse or at short notice.
For goods like cars or high-end stereo equipment which require research, trial and considerable investment, I can see more of a problem. If I can't test-drive a car, there's no way I'm going to buy it. I think I would be willing to pay 0.5 - 1% of purchase price to test-drive a car for a couple of hours, or listen to an amplifier and speaker combination to decide that I'm happy with it.
Also, Borders has found a way to make money from browsers, by having Starbucks in their stores, and caffeine-addled shoppers are more likely to spend.
The manufacturers have a big interest in making sure retail outlets survive - because people are more likely to buy something they can touch and test. Maybe manufacturers can subsidise retail stores to make them more competitive.
Finally, the advantage of purchasing online isn't just about price. I have access to a much wider choice of products from the comfort of my keyboard, I can do research on specifications and customer experiences, and I can make my purchase more quickly (and more economically) than if I have to drive to various stores to inspect there offerings. Maybe retailers can do some work here to level the playing field - like providing internet access so I can check if this wireless card works in the latest Ubuntu, or whatever. That last item is one of the biggies for me, I've walked out of stores where I might have a purchase because it's not possible to get all the information about a product from the shop floor, and shop assistants are rarely knowledgeable about their products or my needs.
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Few people, if any, purchase cars sight unseen on the internet now (ebay's automotive section is more of a big classified ads, just like their real estate section), I don't see that changing in the near future either. For other big-ticket items like home entertainment equipment, the majority of retail sales are at big-box
Re:Until you consider Patents and other G. Monopol (Score:3, Interesting)
You couldn't be more wrong. The little guys would benefit from this. Right now, the stupid masses (Slashdotters included) tend to shop only based on price. Price and price alone. If you can get your widget for $0.01 cheaper online from Omni Mega Corp, you will. You wouldn't care if they were cheaper because they used children for labor. If this thing went through (it won't), people wouldn't be able to pay so much
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No, I won't. I go back to the same retailer even if it is a little bit more expensive. Now if Omni Mega Corp offers it significantly cheaper, that's different. Most people do not buy stuff based on price alone, for if they did noone would buy brandname products - the no-name shop product is quite often contains exactly the same stuff as the brandname, just in cheaper and less flashy packaging (think
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As a retailer, I would simply stop stocking any product that forced me to sell at price higher than the market could bear.
So what? I'm pretty sure the idea is to force you out of the market so they can sell their products directly, taking home the full retail margin instead of mere wholesale.
Step two will be to announce "tiered" pricing floors, where retailers with monthly volumes of 0 to 10 units are required to have a floor of 1.0*x, with 11 to 999,999 units have a floor of 0.99*x, and Wal*Mart has a floor of 0.75*x. Oh, they'll find a way around public outrage, like offering absolutely identical Silver, Gold and Platin
Re:Isn't this the definition of the Free Market? (Score:4, Interesting)
"Why does Apple get to dictate the price of the iPod?"
Apple has a MAP program. You can sell iPods for less; you just can't advertise them for less if you expect to get any support (cash or otherwise) from Apple.
Fry's gets around this. They'll run newspaper ads in which they state that the price of the iPod is $X and that you'll get a $Y rebate, but they stop short of the usual step of pointing out that your final price is $X - $Y.
By the way, Universal Music tried doing a similar MAP program with Tower Records a few years back, and Best Buy and Wal-Mart put a stop to that real fast. We all got settlement checks from Universal, and Tower eventually went out of business. Great news for anybody who doesn't like record companies, subscribes to "what's good for Wal-Mart is good for the country," and doesn't particularly mind the slow death of the indie music retailer at the hands of outfits like Best Buy and Wal-Mart which can afford to use CDs as loss leaders.
Good news for the black market (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:Good news for the black market (Score:5, Insightful)
They do, however, make excellent fodder for populist politicians and the pathologically uninformed. Bread and circuses, anyone?
"Call" online? (Score:4, Interesting)
There are other ways. (Score:5, Insightful)
Another solution? Retailers who thrive on competitve pricing all become like Costco, and sell things "wholesale" to their member customers. It's sort of like those bars where you have to become a "member of the club" (for $0.01) in order to have a drink poured.
This effort will flop, or there will be a legislative cure anyway. Wal-Mart alone would lobby that one right into the stratosphere.
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Re:There are other ways. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:There are other ways. (Score:4, Informative)
Wal*Mart won't give a flying fuck whether, on paper, its suppliers gain the legal right to walk away if Wal*Mart won't agree to minimum price rules. Wal*Mart has its suppliers firmly by the balls, and if they want to continue selling to Wal*Mart, they do whatever Wal*Mart says. And they do want to keep selling to Wal*Mart, because Wal*Mart is literally the largest retailer that has ever existed in the known universe, and no longer being able to sell to them is not good for business.
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Not always. [fastcompany.com]
Re:There are other ways. (Score:5, Informative)
But WalMart still sets their own prices. They may sell for eight cents over or twelve cents under their costs, but that is WalMart's call. The worry here is that WalMart would be forced to sell, say, a shirt at $14.98 even if they want to sell it for $6.92, or a mower for $149.99 even if they wanted to price it at $105.96.\
Substitute the name of your favorite local mom-n-pop for 'WalMart.'
Re:There are other ways. (Score:4, Insightful)
Supplier: No one can sell our product for fewer than X dollars.
Maybe this will be made illegal, but until then, this is how it will work. Walmart is the one with the power in this situation.Wal-Mart: We want to sell it for X-1 dollars. If we can't, we won't bother stocking it at all.
Supplier: Oops, we meant to say that no one can sell our product for fewer than X dollars, unless they're Wal-Mart, who can sell it for X-1 dollars.
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Substitute the name of your favorite local mom-n-pop for 'WalMart.'
In Corporate America, you substitute WalMart for your local 'mom-n-pop'.
Re:There are other ways. (Score:4, Informative)
I think you're forgetting that Wal-Mart basically owns dozens of Representatives and bunches of Senators; if something threatens their business model they will find a way to legislate around it. Experience has shown that legislation bought by corporate interests tends to be incredibly bad and destructive in the long run; therefore, anything which causes Walmart to call in all of its favors at once and get a lot of stuff rushed into the U.S. Code should be avoided. (Because if you don't think Wal-Mart could in about ten minutes get the "Flying Happy Face" turned into the national bird, and Sam Walton's face printed on all U.S. Currency, you're smoking crack. Walmart has a gun to the head of the government, in the form of the ~1.2M people it could suddenly dump onto unemployment.)
If you think the telecommunications industry, the music companies, or big IT (Microsoft, etc.) have an overabundance of power in government, Walmart is orders of magnitude more powerful than them. It's just that Walmart really doesn't have to do anything very often, because it's busy making money hand over fist the way things are.
As other people have pointed out, Walmart's opening move would probably be easy: they'd just force manufacturers to produce slightly different versions of products for their stores, with lower minimum MSRPs. Rather than forcing everyone to sell at the same price, Walmart would just use the law to its advantage and use the law to prevent anyone from ever competing with them on price, even if they wanted to sell certain products at a loss to get people in their stores.
Since manufacturers already package things specifically for Walmart anyway (with different SKUs, etc.) it's a pretty trivial change in many cases. You just package it a little differently, maybe throw in some different add-ons or different configuration options, or create a new "product line" to market it under (particularly good with clothing), and make the minimum MSRP whatever Walmart demands. Since nobody else can buy the 'Walmart version' (Walmart would insist on exclusivity, of course -- and don't think that's ever going to be legislated against; nobody in government would ever really take on Walmart in a fight) there's no way to compete on price.
Questionable (Score:3, Insightful)
Is the submitter suggesting that the periodic sales by mom & pop storesare responsible for keeping retail prices in check "across the board?"
Anti - price fixing laws are actually becoming quite a real problem or manufacturers and retailers, because they have to juggle the retail channel (which really needs 30%) with the online channel, which can be profitable on only about 6% margin. Preventing online from undercutting retail means giving them less margin, which is fair, but even then they can undercut until their margin is absolutely microscopic and still make money, whereas the retailer can not.
If you're happy with a world where brick and mortar retailers just can't exist, then by all means keep the current system and they will die, and not because of free market forces, but because manufacturers can't control their street prices.
I'm OK with it (Score:5, Insightful)
Grocery stores would still exist, as would convenience stores. Clothing shops might do OK since people like to try things on. There are always impulse/emergency items, in many categories. I can see the need for a handful of electronic/computer retailers in a large city.
Can you give me a good reason we should prop up an obsolete business model besides nostalgia or personal preference?
The way I've shopped in the last 10 years is: Online comparison/research. Online purchase unless shipping is more expensive than local, I want an easy return, I need to touch/smell/hear/taste the item first, or I'm in a big hurry.
I always assumed that eventually everyone would adopt this model of shopping and we'd see a massive collapse of brick-and-mortar retailers. Retailers that are smart will be able to adapt. Lots of opportunities, like partnering with an online retailer, offering amenities that aren't possible online, etc.
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Um, forgive me, but "because manufacturers can't control their street prices" sounds to me exactly like "free market forces". "Price control" is the antithesis of a free market.
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They may be, but the point they should be making is that internet retailers are responsible for offering a much lower price to consumers who don't want to pay for the benefits of a brick and mortar store. If you let manufacturers dictate pricing, you eliminate the ability of internet retailers to undercut brick and mortar stores, and we're all forced to pay more m
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If you're happy with a world where horse carriage manufacturers just can't exist, then by all means keep the current system where car manufacturers are not being regulated so that horse carriages can still compete with cars.
For an example of what will happen with this... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:For an example of what will happen with this... (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know if this is illegal or not, but is this not what the article is discussing?
Sort of. (Score:4, Informative)
a.)Manufacturer telling retailer "You must sign a contract to sell at this price, and if you sell below that afterwards, we sue you" is illegal.
b.)Manufacturer telling retailer, "You can't advertise at cheaper than this price, or we won't sell to you anymore" is legal. According to the ACSBlog people, the net effect of the case in point would be to make both legal.
goodbye eBay! (i.e. wont happen) (Score:3, Insightful)
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Isn't Apple doing this? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Isn't Apple doing this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Move it to the internet sales, and its the same story. internet retailers survive off 5-10%. 8% isn't really that high a margin. Even if someone wanted to discount it to sell for cost and make up the money on upsells, WOO HOO, they sell it for 12$ off. Not much there in the way of discounting now is there?
Sure, the larger retailers can sometimes cut a slightly better margin deal with apple if they agree to purchase pallets at a time, and they do. But that is their competative advantage, and there is no reason for them to sell below MSRP (or a dollar below) when all their competitors are barely breaking even. It is much better for the Best Buy's of the world to bundle a free product like iTunes card or accessory discount with the full priced iPod.
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Re:Isn't Apple doing this? & Bose? (Score:4, Informative)
The practice of selling things too cheap will lessen as more and more companies take control of their distribution, cut out distributors, and enforce their pricing policies.
Just a Presumption (Score:2, Interesting)
What About Apple, Bose etc. (Score:2)
What loophole or other back side contractual agreement have they been making with their retailers to keep them from discounting products?
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Bose doesn't circumvent it, but instead applies a (perfectly legal) MAP (minimum advertised price) contract to its resellers. This way you still follow the law (retailers can sell for whatever price they want) but they can't advertise any price below MAP. This is why
Try to look at the upside.... (Score:2)
Since 1911, my ass (Score:4, Interesting)
That's where the "membership stores" like Costco really got going: they could, through a legal fiction, sell at below the set price. When the law changed, they lost (at least some of) their advantages, and quite a few (anyone remember FedCo?) went Tango Uniform. Costco (or, as it was here, Price Club) was one of the survivors.
Well, if the Court votes price fixing back in then I guess a lot of Wally Worlds will turn into Sam's Clubs.
Won't Get Fooled Again [thewho.net]
There's nothing in the streets
...
Looks any different to me
And the slogans are replaced, by-the-bye
Meet the new boss
Same as the old boss
Doesn't this already exist as MAP? (Score:3, Interesting)
Jan 2004 commentary on legal uncertainty of MAP:
http://www.fredlaw.com/articles/marketing/mark_04
May 2000 FTC "analysis to aid public comment" on MAP policies of "the five largest distributors of prerecorded music," Sony, Universal, BMG, WEA, and EMI:
http://www.ftc.gov/os/2000/05/mapanalysis.htm [ftc.gov]
Put you tinfoil hats on (Score:3, Interesting)
Announcing... (Score:3, Funny)
That's right!
Just because your government won't let you shop around for the best deal, doesn't mean that you can't save money.
Stop buying from those overpriced American stores, and get started cross-border shopping!
Our friendly agents are standing by to serve you, eh.
For The Other Side Of The Argument... (Score:5, Interesting)
TFA is not a news article, it is a guest editorial by a friend ("amicus") of the defendants. So, it is very slanted as to why minimum resale price agreements should continue to be in violation of antitrust laws. Knowing there is always two sides to a story, I sought out that other side and found this from the Ayn Rand Institute:
Legalize "Price-Fixing" [aynrand.org]
Please note that by posting this, I am not saying I support the Ayn Rand Institute's side; I mearly think it is important to hear both sides of the debate. In this case, I think the Institute does a poor job of convincing the public that their position in in our best interest.
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Actually, I think this makes sense. If you want control over the price of a product that you manu
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Libertarians (Score:5, Insightful)
The market will move (Score:3, Informative)
If this happens, then it will be a simple matter of resellers and such moving their product internationally, and then selling it from either Canada or Mexico, both members of NAFTA.
Yeah, it'll really hurt mom and pops, but many companies are now auctioning off their excess on eBay, and this would just encourage a new infrastructure, which will inevitably move more capital out of the U.S.
I could lose my house because of this law... (Score:4, Interesting)
This rule caused us lots of harm and prevented the growth of our small, self-funded entreprenuerial business. As a manufacturer, having local resellers is a less expensive alternative to hiring our own sales force. The distribution channel is essentially a way to outsource sales, which if you are a small start-up is often a key enabler to getting your business off the ground. Resellers are crucial to us because they call on customers, demonstrate our products, answer questions, do local support and even run local ads. That's why they are worth the ~30% margin I build in to our business model to pay them. Dealers also assume credit cost/risk and aggregate a bunch of onesy/twosy orders into volume purchases that our small company can handle. To me that 30% is a necessary cost of making and selling my product just as much as parts and assembly. If the dealer didn't make that investment on my behalf, then I would have to raise that much more money and pay to do that work myself. That's the beauty of a distribution channel. I don't have to fund that pre-sales and distribution expense upfront out of my pocket. My reseller partners essentially go into business with me, do the work and get paid for their work by adding that cost downstream of me. It's a wonderful enabling option for me as an entreprenuer - except it doesn't work because of this law. It makes it so that I can't ensure that my reseller will actually be repaid for their investment and work to build our mutual business.
The problem is that as soon as my product starts to get any momentum, an internet or mail-order 'box house' buys a little inventory from a distributor and marks the product up only 15%. Prospects still learn about the product from the local sales calls, ads or shows our 'real' dealers invest their money to do, and prospects still phone the 'real' dealers for pre-sales questions and demos but then many of the prospects buy from the box house because it's cheaper. But it's only cheaper because those box houses 'cheat' by not doing the market development and support work that we need them to do (and built into the margin to pay for). In that case I'd rather lower my product's selling price and split the difference directly with the consumer. The problem is that then I don't have anyone doing local demos, sales, support etc. Some products need those things to succeed and those products (like mine) are harmed by this law.
When I design, cost-estimate and raise capital to build a product, I always have a projected ASP (Average Selling Price). This is what we think a typical consumer will typically pay for the product. We use this to figure out if the product will be a good competitive alternative in the market and if enough customers will actually buy the product. We balance the bill of materials, advertising, cost of sales and customer acquisition costs. In our ASP there is an average expected reseller margin which is there to pay the resellers to do the work we need them to do to make the product successful. Those box houses are essentially 'leeching' the value of the pre-sales work and investment I asked my 'real' reseller partners to make. It sucks that I make this product by my own hand and the "sweat of my brow" so to speak, but then this law limits how I bring my product to the marketplace, how I implement my distribution partnerships, and how I grow my business.
In my view the law is a government intrusion into my right to enter into certain kinds of mutually agreed contracts with my distribution partners. It also quite literally limits what products I can consider creating and offering to consumers. I have to stay away from products that I feel need a lot of face-to-face explanation, demonstration and support to succeed. There's no way I can justify raising the capital from my investors to fund local sales offices and this law make
Blame the Victim (Score:5, Insightful)
The apologists for the Nanny State routinely trot out antitrust as an example of where the free market doesn't work, but in reality it's the industries with the most regulation by government that are the most monopolized. Take telecommunications. For most of the history of telephones, it was illegal to compete for customers. That monopoly was enforced by local governments. But I guess as long as you control the government schools that teach the history of 'Robber Barons', people will believe the propaganda.
Re:Blame the Victim (Score:5, Insightful)
And I think I have the counter example to your telephone system
story. The computer industry. Used to be pretty open.
Lots of players. Now, there are many fewer, and larger
corporations involved. Almost like it was natural for them
to do this.
The telephone system example is not a very good one, in my
opinion. According to wikipedia, AT&T had competitors in
the very early days and ( I presume ) no regulations aside
those any company might have. Then they bought out competitors
until they became regarded as a monopoly. Then came the
regulations and government interference.
On the SEC, I take it you disagree with the assessment that
rules and regulations bring additional investor confidence,
increasing investment and growth for everyone? What happened
in the depression? People put their money in their mattresses.
Why? Lack of confidence in financial systems.
And on the government schools, it almost sounds like a conspiracy.
They control the schools so they can control the curriculum with
the intent of making good little socialists out of everyone?
They are doing a remarkably bad job of it, considering how many
conservatives there are.
Re:Blame the Victim (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you have your history backwards - perhaps whichever non-government school that left out the part about the "Robber Barons" when teaching you history also forgot to mention that bit about how the telephone industry only became so highly regulated because it was already actively abusing its monopoly status. To my knowledge all the stuff about not competing for customers was merely a restriction on Ma Bell to keep them at less than 85% market dominance, as per the anti-trust settlements at the time. Even the most hardcore of free-market types realize that leaving monopolies alone is downright stupid - no theory of economics can reasonably make the claim that a monopoly is good for anyone but the monopolist.
In fact, the subject of this article is most dangerous in the context of monopolies and near-monopolies. I remember when I was little getting a few bucks in the mail from Nintendo because it had come out that they were pulling this kind of price fixing crap with all the retailers, and they got caught. So don't pretend that this is just paranoia - if this becomes legal, companies will use it to screw over customers, especially in situations where the item in question is not a commodity but rather a highly branded item in an industry with very little substantial competition like a Nintendo (back when there was no real competition, that is - now the field is too crowded to mess around too much with the customer) or an iPod (since the Zune sucks, Apple can do just about whatever it wants).
Wolves guarding the Sheeple (Score:3, Insightful)
Fraud and force are the two things that justify the retaliatory use of force by government. And Enron executives were convicted for their illegal acts. Just like every other high-profile crime that is used as an excuse to give the government more power
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It already was illegal, there's no need for a new law to make it even more illegal.
companies will use it to screw over customers
And there, you touched on the point that shows so clearly how free markets work so well. Nintendo may have had a near monopoly 20 years ago, but gues
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
You're telling me the SEC is the main barrier to setting up a new business in an existing market? Incumbency, first mover advantage, economies of scale, brand, negotiating power... these are all relatively minor obstacles? It's classic to set one conception of the free market on one side and the government (which is hardly a blameless regardless of your perspective) on the other as if there's a simple binary choice betwe
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
User956, you know of course that you are going straight to hell for that kind of thinking. Blasphemer!
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No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Well, then you're entering the murky world between the pure capitalism of a commodity market, and the non-price-sensitive premium product space which is driven by marketing.
For example, if Apple wants to lock the price of iPods, there isn't going to be a more efficient producer of iPods that will undercut their price lock. Another type of MP3-player, sure, but the premium consumer product space is not one that responds
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Part of my geekiness manifests itself in the form of flashlights. I like nice ones. 10 years ago if you wanted a nice flashlight you bought a Surefire, the only decent alternative was a Mag light which is not even close to Surefire quality or functionality. Surefire's dealers used to compete with one another and a visit to CPF [candlepowerforums.com] would usually r
Re:No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:4, Interesting)
Huh? I must have been hallucinating when I walked into Best Buy over the weekend and saw non-iPod MP3 players. I must have also had the same fever when browsing the web learning about services such as Zune and Yahoo! Music, which let you not only purchase non-iTunes music for use with those hypothetical non-iPod players, but also subscribe to services which let you download unlimited music for a monthly fee. Alternative business models - imagine that!
Now, if the government regulated that all music players must be iPods and forced everybody else out of the industry then we would have cause for concern. Until then, use iPod if you like it or you think it makes you look cool, and use whatever else if you like that. But don't complain that you don't have choices, because you do.
Oh, and while you're at it, please favor either subscription services or services where when you buy a song you get the *rights* to play that song in perpetuitity regardless of how technology progresses. Buying the same music over and over is lame. (I have yet to see a business promoting the latter, but if there's more demand...)
Re:No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:4, Interesting)
To explain: if iTunes is the only service that provides the song, then the only way to buy it is through iTunes and thus, the only way to put it on a player is if the player is an iPod. Sure, today, you could buy a CD instead and rip it (except that copy protection and the DMCA can make that illegal), but there is no guarantee that unprotected CDs will be available in the future.
Re:No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:5, Interesting)
Intuitively, I find that fixing this is the least offensive of the "everything copyable should be freeeee!" movement, but at the same time the difficultly is that the alternative actually restricts the ability for other companies to try alternative business models.
For example, let's say I want to buy a song from Garth Brooks. Curiously, none of the music services I've tried (as far as I can remember) offer his songs for download. Maybe iTunes does; I haven't tried that one. But that's perfectly fine in my view -- he (or his distributor, or whatever) decided he didn't want to distribute his songs under that model. Who am I to force him to?
One of the great things about the music business is that there's a lot of talent out there. This means there's a lot of opportunity to create and try new business models, even if not everybody signs on. Exclusivity can be used to push business models, both to an individual consumer's advantage and disadvantage. But that's OK.
Re:No minimum price? Fine. No product for you. (Score:4, Insightful)
My point was not anti-copyright. My point was that copyright is inherently a monopoly and thus there cannot be free trade, furthermore, interoperability requirements and DMCA mean that this government sanctioned monopoly can be extended to hardware. Imagine that you want to put a song onto a mobile player and that song is only available through iTunes (it is not even available in a CD form from which it can be legally ripped). You no longer have a free choice on your purchase of player. If one player cannot be substituted for another, is there a free market?
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Ownership of my land does not interfere with you and the use of your land. Just because I own my land I can't suddenly sue to to prevent you from using your land effectively.
This notion that you "own" a creative work is pure bullshit because it's based on the bullshit notion that you are it's sole creator. You're not. You take advantage of 10,000 years of combined human effort in the arts and sciences. It's fine to whine about how inventions are like land except eventually someone else
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:5, Informative)
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:5, Insightful)
Although most manufacturers do set a minimum advertiseable price. But again, many major retailers refuse to follow such rules, and most small ones aren't really subject to scrutiny.
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:5, Interesting)
And the free-market answer to that is that no manufacturer will be able to sell the price-fixed product because no retailers will do business with them.
As a player in the market I play not just for profit, but for market share. My aim is to put all competitors out of business, and since I'm in a market with very high barriers to entry I can keep them out of business. Now that I have achieved a monopoly (and monopoly rents), the retailers have no choice but to do business with me and I will certainly dictate the exact conditions under which my products can be sold. If I'm unable to achive a monopoly, I will instead collude with the other surviving players to our mutual advantage, and again to the disadvantage of retailers and consumers.
This scenario is historically why Anti-trust law was necessary in the first place.
Are you seriously suggesting that retailers are refusing to stock Microsoft products because these products come with strings attached? Reality check: Should their sales agreements specify minium resale prices, the mum & dad computer shops will be in no position to refuse MS. And they won't.
This is but one of the reasons that the intervention of the state is necessary to a healthily functioning capitalist economy.
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with your scenario is that it relys on a market that has a "high barrier to entry", or a market whose barrier to entry is so high that no other players can enter, no matter what. The reality is though, in a true free market this is never the case. No matter how high the barrier to entry, there is always room for another player.
There are two things that can help overcome high barriers to entry. Large companied with lots of capital, and innovation of new technologies. Large companies help because, for example, if every widget company decided to start selling their widgets for double the price that they should, then some other rich company with lots of capital to invest in making widgets is going to come in and start selling widgets for less.
The most important equalizer to high barriers to entry though is innovation. No matter what, new technologies will always be invented, and no monopoly can ever rest on its laurels forever. The market may be unbalanced for a short while, but it will even itself out, quicker and fairer than slow moving anti-trust laws can.
The only way that there can be a market with an infinitely high barrier to entry is when the government is involved, through patents, copyrights, subsidies, and other protectionist laws.
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with your scenario is that it relys on a market that has a "high barrier to entry", or a market whose barrier to entry is so high that no other players can enter, no matter what. The reality is though, in a true free market this is never the case.
You don't need to achieve a pure monopoly to dictate to retailers or charge near monopoly rents. Look at the example I cited, ie. the PC OS market Sure you can point to MacOS, and Linux, but these don't seriously dent Microsoft's power, especially in regard to small business computer retailers (maybe someone as big as Dell can get away with shiping PCs without that OS installed ...). Note the barrier to entry here isn't capital expenditure, as it is in chip manufacturing for instance, but primarily network effects.
The most important equalizer to high barriers to entry though is innovation. ... The only way that there can be a market with an infinitely high barrier to entry is when the government is involved, through patents, copyrights, subsidies, and other protectionist laws.
While I'm against the overweening IP regime we are currently subjected to, we should not loose sight of the necessity of IP regulation. IP addresses another market failure, namely the 'free rider effect,' (again demonstrating the necessity of some limited state intervention for a functioning capitalist economy). For innovation to be an effective equaliser to barriers to entry, it requires that very IP protection you decry! Otherwise the innovator will simply have their innovation taken from them by the established players in the market. The innovator bears the research costs, while big guys use their market power to cut that innovator out from the profits of their own innovation. Not a good look.
The market may be unbalanced for a short while, but it will even itself out, quicker and fairer than slow moving anti-trust laws can.
That is a very romantic notion ... unfortunately history demonstrates the exact opposite.
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Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:4, Insightful)
Except that there's only one Wal-Mart, and what will happen is that Wal-Mart will dictate that they get a price floor that is 75% less than everyone else's, and they mop up their competition.
Personally, I think that contractual price floors are repugnant, not because of antitrust concerns, but because it's a contract that affects me directly without permitting me to have any negotiation rights or to even agree to it.
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Tell that to Dell and other PC makers who have to cave in to Microsoft. (I'm not MS bashing here, it is the first example that came to mind.) If you have a true or effective monopoly you can dictate price, especially if the manufacturer chooses to abuse the monopoly. Even more so if the government/courts choose to ignore and/or abet the abuse. In the case of MS, the republican direction to the justice department was to basically ignore the fact that MS was found guilty of abusing their effective monopol
Re:adam smith is rolling in his grave (Score:4, Interesting)
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Actually, I would expect Walmart to continue to dictate to the manufacturers just as they do today, even if SCOTUS were to overturn this. Walmart has shown its willingness to cut out manufacturers that don't toe the Walmart line in the past - don't think that just because the manufacturers may gain the legal right to negotiate a price point with their retailers that they will suddenly have power over Walmart.
Let those price-leveling overlords try. Walmart will still crush them.
Of course, then I wonder w
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If you get to an accident at a lonely road late some night, and I happen to pass by and agree to call an ambulance if and only if you sign a contract g
What do you mean "would?" (Score:2)
This legal attempt would make the rest of the market more like the RIAA's market.
Some other monopolies (or near so) are phone, internet, TV, etc.