price maintenance

price maintenance

also called  resale price maintenance 

      measures taken by manufacturers or distributors to control the resale prices of their products charged by resellers. The practice is more effective in retail sales than at other levels of marketing. Only a few types of goods have come under such controls, the leading examples being drugs and pharmaceuticals, books, photographic supplies, liquors, miscellaneous household appliances, and various specialty goods.

      The initial movement for resale price maintenance in the 1880s reflected the success of brand promotion and the resulting increase in competition among retailers. American manufacturers were granted more specific authority than was the case in other parts of the world; the so-called nonsigners' clause in state fair-trade laws (fair-trade law) made the contractual prices agreed upon between a manufacturer and contracting dealers binding upon all resellers. (See fair-trade law.)

      Resale price maintenance as a business practice was weakened during the post-World War II years. It was prohibited in both Canada and Sweden and strongly attacked in France. Of the 44 states in the United States that had fair-trade laws with effective nonsigner provisions during the 1930s, fewer than half still retained those laws 30 years later, and in 1975 fair-trade laws were repealed altogether by an act of Congress. In Great Britain, a governmental committee recommended strongly against collective sanctions and enforcement of resale price maintenance agreements, in sharp contrast to earlier governmental investigations of the subject. In 1956 Great Britain enacted the Restrictive Trade Practices Act, and in 1964 resale price maintenance was made illegal by an act of Parliament, excepting a few products, such as books.

      Resale price maintenance by manufacturers was weakened when large-scale retailing, together with the growth of strong dealer organizations, set up conflicting interests within the retailing field. Because marketing channels in highly industrialized countries are complex and overlapping, the establishment and enforcement of a single price or even a minimum price by manufacturers is a complicated and burdensome task in the absence of collective enforcement efforts, limitation of numbers of enterprises, or governmental intervention. Because effective resale price controls attract excessive capital and manpower into distribution activities by eliminating price competition, such a program logically requires some means of restricting the numbers of enterprises.

      Although fair-trade laws prevent well-known brands from being used as “bait” to attract customers to buy other brands pushed by distributors, it is generally agreed that resale price maintenance or “fair trade” is not a true solution to problems arising out of trade conflicts or unfair and deceptive selling practices.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • price maintenance — / praɪs ˌmeɪntənəns/ noun an agreement between producers or distributors on a minimum price for a product …   Marketing dictionary in english

  • PRICE MAINTENANCE — …   Useful english dictionary

  • Resale price maintenance — (RPM) is the practice whereby a manufacturer and its distributors agree that the latter will sell the former s product at certain prices (resale price maintenance), at or above a price floor (minimum resale price maintenance) or at or below a… …   Wikipedia

  • retail price maintenance — UK US noun [U] (ABBREVIATION RPM) COMMERCE ► RESALE PRICE MAINTENANCE(Cf. ↑resale price maintenance): »The Office of Fair Trading decided against retail price maintenance on over the counter branded medicines …   Financial and business terms

  • resale price maintenance — UK US noun [U] (also retail price maintenance, ABBREVIATION RPM) COMMERCE, FINANCE ► a system in which the price of goods is controlled by the manufacturer, so that sellers are not allowed to reduce the price for customers: »The Monopolies and… …   Financial and business terms

  • Resale Price Maintenance Agreement — Resale Price Maintenance (RPM) Agreement USA An agreement between a supplier and its distributors that limits the prices the distributors can charge customers for the supplier s products. Types of RPM agreements include a: • Minimum RPM agreement …   Law dictionary

  • Resale Price Maintenance (RPM) Agreement — USA An agreement between a supplier and its distributors that limits the prices the distributors can charge customers for the supplier s products. Types of RPM agreements include a: • Minimum RPM agreement, in which a distributor agrees not to… …   Law dictionary

  • resale price maintenance — n: a form of illegal price fixing in which a manufacturer compels different retailers to resell a product at the same price and thereby prevents competition Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • resale-price maintenance — ➔ maintenance …   Financial and business terms

  • resale price maintenance — The setting of a fixed minimum price on an article by the manufacturer (abbrev RPM) • • • Main Entry: ↑resale * * * resale price maintenance, Especially British. fair trade …   Useful english dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”