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by boredguy8
4908 days ago
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These laws were established in the 1930s when factories would establish franchisees in (what was to them) low-value regions. As they grew more valuable, they would move into the region with factory-owned dealerships & start gouging franchisees. Since then, lobbying power has undoubtedly extended dealership power further than what's generally beneficial. But the starting point, it seems to me, made sense. For a fairly balanced (but not up-to-date as far as the status of legal challenges) starting point: http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motoramic/tesla-plans-short-cir... |
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It doesn't make sense to me. This could be handled with contracts, not laws. When signing a franchise with a factory, you stipulate that they can't enter your market or otherwise infringe on your territory by doing ___________.
It's a perfectly fine contract clause that unnecessarily turned into a law.