The whole economy pays the Amazon tax
8 hours ago
- #Monopoly
- #Amazon
- #Antitrust
- Amazon's monopoly forces sellers to pay high fees (50-60% of product prices), which leads to higher prices across the entire economy due to 'most favored nation' (MFN) pricing policies.
- The U.S. economy is 'K-shaped,' where the top 10% of earners thrive while the bottom 90% struggle with debt and stagnant wages, making them unable to afford purchases outside of Amazon.
- Amazon's pricing power comes from Prime subscribers, who predominantly start and end their shopping on Amazon due to prepaid shipping and competitive pricing.
- California's Attorney General is suing Amazon for price-fixing, revealing internal documents that confirm Amazon's manipulation of prices economy-wide.
- Attempts to boycott Amazon individually are ineffective; organized collective action is needed to challenge monopolistic practices.
- Amazon's dominance is supported by policies favoring creditors over debtors, exacerbating financial struggles for average Americans.
- Other corporations, like Pepsi and Walmart, have engaged in similar anti-competitive pricing schemes, though enforcement has been inconsistent.
- State-level antitrust actions, like California's lawsuit, offer a path to hold Amazon accountable despite federal inaction.
- Amazon's profits fund political agendas, including support for policies that undermine democracy and workers' rights.
- Future legal actions should target corporate mergers and financial incentives that enable monopolistic behavior and political corruption.