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Re: Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing
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Lets say a manufacturer sets out in their contracts that they're product cannot be sold for anything less then 400% of what it was sold for wholesale. Seemingly an equal scheme. However, when combined with bulk purchasing discounts it would massively benefit large stores, to make small purchasers uncompetitive. Lets say if the retailer received a bulk purchase discount of 5%, it would instead give him an edge on competitors of 20%. Last edited by Thematic-Device; 07-02-2007 at 07:56 PM. |
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Re: Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing
edit my math was screy, in a case of a 4x markup on a 100 dollar good
At 5% bulk discount: With no mandated pricing the advantage is 1.6% With mandated pricing the advantage is 5% At 10% With no mandated pricing the advantage is 2.6% With Mandated Pricing the advantage is 10% |
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Re: Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing
There is nothing wrong with this. When we say that someone owns something, what we mean is that someone owns the rights to that something. And when we say that someone is selling something, what we mean is that someone is selling the rights to that something. For example, if I sell you the rights to my house, you can do with it whatever you want. You can paint it black, red or ornage, you can add a porch or blow it up. The point is, you have the right to do with the house what you please and I have no right to tell you what you can and cannot do.
However, when selling the rights to the house, I need not sell you ALL of the rights. Although this is usually what happens, it is not the only possibility. I may chose to sell you all of the rights to the house except the right to paint porch orange. In other words, you would have the right to do anything with the house except paint the porch orange. If I am a manufacturer of a product, I can sell all of the rights to this product, or partial rights. For example, I can sell you all of the rights to a product EXCEPT the right to sell it below a certain price. Issues of Constitutionality are simply irrleavant here. The Constitution does not, in any way, restrict the prices businesses can charge for a product. The Constitution limits government.
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"Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question." -Thomas Jefferson in his first inauguration address |
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Re: Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing
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Re: Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing
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However, in the US, there is already a market for cars as you prescribed. Enterprise, Thrifty, Hertz, and others all sell their cars, online or through intermediaries, on their leased vehicles or dealerships selling their demos. Similarly, you have the foreclosure market on homes and and autos. This decision does not blur the difference between a new or used product now the dispositions of propety under a short sell. |
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LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.uspoliticsonline.com/economic-issues/39407-bushs-supreme-court-oks-retail-price-fixing.html
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| Posted By | For | Type | Date |
| Bush's Supreme Court OKs Retail Price Fixing - U.S. Politics Online: A Political Discussion Forum | This thread | Refback | 07-02-2007 01:31 PM |