A Coalition of States and the FTC Sue Amazon for Illegally Maintaining Monopoly Power

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Staff Report –

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Federal Trade Commission and 17 states filed a lawsuit against the online retailer Amazon started by Jeff Bezos on Tuesday, setting up a long-awaited antitrust fight with the e-commerce giant that could alter the way Americans shop for everything from toilet paper to electronics.

Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown announced the lawsuit, which alleges that the online retail and technology company is operating a “monopoly” that uses a set of interlocking anticompetitive and unfair strategies to illegally maintain its market share and power with actions allowing it to stop rivals and sellers from lowering prices, degrading quality for shoppers, overcharging sellers, stifling innovation and preventing rivals from fairly competing against Amazon dot com.

The complaint alleges that Amazon violates the law, not because it is big, but because it engages in a course of exclusionary conduct that prevents current competitors from growing and new competitors from emerging. By stifling competition on price, product selection, quality, and by preventing its current or future rivals from attracting a critical mass of shoppers and sellers, Amazon ensures that no current or future rivals can threaten its dominance, they say.

“Small businesses are a critical part of what makes Amazon’s online marketplace successful,” Attorney General Brown said Attorney General Brown in making the announcement. “But Amazon’s anti-competitive conduct harms the real people that run these businesses, and that harm also extends deeply into its customers’ pockets.”

Amazon’s far- reaching schemes impact hundreds of billions of dollars in retail sales every year, touch hundreds of thousands of products sold by businesses big and small, and affect over a hundred million shoppers, the lawsuit alleges.

“Because of Amazon’s unlawful tactics, shoppers are paying higher prices and Maryland small businesses are either at the mercy of a monopolist or, put simply, at risk going out of business.” Brown said. “There’s too much at stake here for consumers and small businesses, and we’re going to put a stop to Amazon’s monopoly.”

The coalition and FTC allege Amazon’s anticompetitive conduct occurs in two markets: the online superstore market, that serves shoppers; and the market for online marketplace services purchased by sellers.

These tactics include:

Anti-discounting measures that punish sellers and deter other online retailers from offering prices lower than Amazon, which serves to keep prices higher for products across the internet. For example, if Amazon discovers that a seller is offering lower-priced goods elsewhere, Amazon will bury discounting sellers so far down in Amazon’s search results that they become effectively invisible.

Conditioning sellers’ ability to obtain “Prime” eligibility for their products – a virtual necessity for doing business on Amazon – on sellers using Amazon’s costly fulfillment service, which has made it substantially more expensive for sellers on Amazon to also offer their products on other platforms. This unlawful coercion has, in turn, limited competitors’ ability to effectively compete against Amazon.

Amazon’s illegal, exclusionary conduct makes it impossible for competitors to gain a foothold. With its amassed power across both the online superstore market and the online marketplace services market, Amazon effectively extracts enormous monopoly rents from everyone within its reach.

This includes:

Degrading the customer experience by replacing relevant, organic search results with paid advertisements – and deliberately increasing junk ads that worsen search quality and frustrate both shoppers seeking competitor products and sellers who are promised a return on their advertising purchase.

Biasing Amazon’s search results to preference Amazon’s own products over those that Amazon knows are of better quality.

Charging costly fees to the hundreds of thousands of sellers that currently have no choice but to rely on Amazon to stay in business. These fees range from a monthly fee – that sellers must pay for each item sold, to advertising fees that have become virtually necessary for sellers to do business. Combined, all these fees force many sellers to pay close to 50 percent of their total revenues to Amazon. These fees harm not only sellers, but also shoppers who pay increased prices for thousands of products sold on or off Amazon.

The coalition and the FTC are seeking a permanent injunction in federal court that would prohibit Amazon from engaging in this unlawful conduct and pry loose Amazon’s monopolistic control to restore competition.

In filing the lawsuit, Attorney General Brown joins the FTC and the Attorneys General of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.

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Rick
Rick
6 months ago

Interesting. Only one red state joined the blue states on this suit. Watch what happens when other folks notice it. I think they will be dropping out of the suit.