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Old April 4th 04, 11:12 PM
Peter
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MichaelR wrote:

You are half right.
Manufacturers can set _minimum_ sale prices:

http://www.ftc.gov/bc/compguide/question.htm


The above website does not support your assertion. It states:
"If the manufacturer and a dealer entered into an agreement on a resale
price or minimum price, that would be a price-fixing violation. The
agreement could be formal, through a contract, or informal, when the
dealer’s compliance is coerced. However, if the manufacturer has
established a policy that its dealers should not sell below a minimum price
level, and the dealers have independently decided to follow that policy,
there is no violation."

So a manufacturer coercing a dealer to abide by a minimum sales price
is a violation of price-fixing legislation. But the manufacturer can
suggest a minimum sales price and hope that the dealers abide by it.

If Garmin is telling dealers that they must abide by the minimum price
for the 296 or have their supplies cut off that would constitute
coersion and I expect they would lose in court if Darrel (tvnav) or
other affected dealers decide to fight the policy.

"Will Thompson" wrote in message
...


So why is this? Manufacturers *cannot* set actual selling prices, per
federal law (Sherman Act and related) so it is strange that they try to
impose this barrier.