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by gamblor956
1879 days ago
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That's the right way to look at it, missing just one crucial detail. Costco pays for the items that appear on its shelves (excepting the <1% of goods that are on a consignment basis, usually new trial products). The distributor of the store brand and the name brand have already been paid for the products (and are usually the same company). Amazon gets paid by the distributors (aka third party sellers) on Amazon.com for handling their sales (even in instances where it is not handling fulfillment), while also competing against them. That is where the anticompetitive concerns arise. If Amazon just sold stuff through the Amazon.com seller, and didn't have third-party sellers, (or if it operated a separate website for third party sellers) that would be fine. |
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Effectively the difference in practice is a matter of financing and grain of operation - older retail would gain more and give no extra to upfront sales of say toliet paper after a demand spike raised prices while Amazon would give them a per sale percentage cut.
At what point does own involvement in consignment sales models become not fine? If it works at 1% consignment. Is it 25%? 50%? 75%? 90%? Or more likely it doesn't exist because the whole concept is a fabrication that pays no attention to real law and operates in the court of public opinion to push their bullshit which wouldn't even need a defendant motion before winding up dismissed by a judge because they cannot point to any real laws?