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by Nasrudith
1875 days ago
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Don't most large brick and mortar retailers maintain refund for unsold goods agreements in addition to defects? Generally only exercised if they are complete failures. 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? |
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Also, Amazon does not give a per sale cut of the percentage, nor would they, since that's not how consignment works. Consignment goods are still sold at retail price; the only difference is that the supplier only gets paid for goods that sold. They don't get to share in the (additional) profits if the retailer (aka "Amazon.com")charges more due to spiking prices.