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#1
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#3
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Price fixing is illegal, but only at the level where retailers conspire to
fix prices. The courts have repeatedly held that manufacturers can enforce mandatory pricing levels on their customers (the retailers). Thus Garmin is perfectly free to set a minimum retail price for its products and even refuse to do business with retailers that violate the policy. You already see it in almost every sector of the economy, but you don't notice it because it really only works for scarce, high demand items like the Garmin 296. |
#4
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C J Campbell wrote:
Thus Garmin is perfectly free to set a minimum retail price for its products and even refuse to do business with retailers that violate the policy. And at Oskosh of all places can you blame them. Imagine the chaos, confusion and ill will if Garmin had even ten distributors, sales reps, independent agents, etc., each desperate to make sales for their own boss, store, area, etc. each setting their own price and listening to people like you tell them that another sales rep quoted a lower price. Can you imagine the howling if one of you bought a particular model for say seven hundred bucks and while gloating about your great deal someone else walked up to you with the identical product and laughed at you because they only paid six hundred and twenty five. You would be screaming at Garmin for being inconsistant in their pricing, etc., etc., blah, blah, blah, yada, yada, yada..... and you all know it. |
#5
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![]() "Shiver Me Timbers" wrote in message ... C J Campbell wrote: Thus Garmin is perfectly free to set a minimum retail price for its products and even refuse to do business with retailers that violate the policy. And at Oskosh of all places can you blame them. Imagine the chaos, confusion and ill will if Garmin had even ten distributors, sales reps, independent agents, etc., each desperate to make sales for their own boss, store, area, etc. each setting their own price and listening to people like you tell them that another sales rep quoted a lower price. Can you imagine the howling if one of you bought a particular model for say seven hundred bucks and while gloating about your great deal someone else walked up to you with the identical product and laughed at you because they only paid six hundred and twenty five. You would be screaming at Garmin for being inconsistant in their pricing, etc., etc., blah, blah, blah, yada, yada, yada..... and you all know it. You seem to know a great deal about "people like me." Or maybe not -- did you detect some tone of complaint in my post? It was unintended, to be sure. People who know me well would realize that I oppose any laws against price fixing. I think you should be able to do business with whomever you like whenever you like, and no government has the right to tell you what to charge, who to sell to, or anything else. Government's role should be strictly limited to preventing you from defrauding people. If I buy something at a price and find it cheaper elsewhere, that is just too bad. It was worth the higher price to me when I bought it, therefore it continues to be worth that much to me. I don't go back to retailers and complain they charged too much, unless the retailer has expressly given me a guarantee that his is the lowest price. I stick with my agreements and I expect others to honor theirs. |
#6
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C J Campbell wrote:
did you detect some tone of complaint in my post? Oh no..... I wasn't trying to put you personally on the spot. In a nutshell I was just trying to say that when various people get together at the same venue selling the same identical product as representatives of a national company like Garmin, that from the standpoint of the manufacturer it would make sense to make sure that during that particular event that all sales reps were playing on the same field. |
#7
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![]() Larry Dighera wrote: This is occurring in many other sectors of the marketplace. It is my understanding that Price Fixing is illegal, but it has become the norm in the marketplace as far as I can see. Then you do not understand what constitutes price fixing. It is illegal for two or more manufacturers to make basically the same item and agree between them on the prices they intend to charge. That's price fixing. The same is true if two or more retailers get together and agree on a minimum price. The key factor in this is the conspiracy. It is perfectly legal for a manufacturer (such as Garmin) to dictate a minimum price to a retailer on any product they make. That's not price fixing. That's what's going on here, and it is (as you say) common practice in many fields. George Patterson In Idaho, tossing a rattlesnake into a crowded room is felony assault. In Tennessee, it's evangelism. |
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