Amazon quietly ends controversial pricing agreements with sellers
Amazon will no longer require its third-party sellers to price their products lower than on other competing websites
It quietly eliminated a clause in its contracts that critics have called anti-competitive.
Price parity agreements, or most-favored nations clauses (MFNs), were formerly used by Amazon in contracts with third-party sellers to ensure that people selling products on the platform did not sell the same products for cheaper on any other platform like eBay or Alibaba, reports The Verge.
Amazon declined to comment.
A few years ago, regulators in Germany and Great Britain investigated this practice and it was dropped in Europe. The threat of regulation or impending investigations might be at fault for causing Amazon to drop MFNs in the United States as well. Last December, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) penned letters to the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission demanding an investigation into these anti-competitive provisions in Amazon’s contracts.
“Amazon’s wise and welcome decision comes only after aggressive advocacy and attention that compelled Amazon to abandon its abusive contract clause,” Blumenthal said Monday. “I remain deeply troubled that federal regulators responsible for cracking down on anti-competitive practices seem asleep at the wheel, at great cost to American innovation and consumers.”
Last week, presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) rolled out a sweeping proposal to break up big tech companies like Apple, Amazon and Google, and announced that it would be one of her top priorities as president, reports TechSpot.
More Amazon news
Aggressive Amazon tactics to promote its private-label brands
Amazon pushes shoppers to its own brand before clicking ‘buy’Amazon has introduced a new feature that markets its private-label brands right before consumers add rival products to their shopping carts.The Washington Post conducted dozens of product...
Amazon lists thousands of banned and unsafe products
Dangerous products for sale on AmazonThe platform was found to have 4,152 items that were deemed unsafe by federal agencies, labeled misleadingly, or banned by federal regulators by a report from The Wall Street Journal.These listings, many of which were...
Amazon Launches Operations in Israel
Amazon expands to the fast-growing Middle East marketAmazon announced the start of operations in Israel and launched a website encouraging sellers to start deliveries to Israeli customers.Amazon Services website in both Hebrew and English offers local and...