Restrained Trade

Restrained Trade
Author: Mark Tilton
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2018-05-31
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1501717510

No detailed description available for "Restrained Trade".

Restrained Trade

Restrained Trade
Author: Mark Tilton
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1996
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780801430992

While Americans enjoy competitive prices for products imported from Japan, Japanese consumers often pay high prices for the same goods. How do Japanese industries manage to export heavily, keep prices high at home, and limit cheap imports into their own markets? Trade associations play a key role in Japan's political economy, Mark Tilton argues. They provide informal market governance that maintains high domestic prices and in some cases directly blocks foreign-made commodities. Tilton profiles the cement, aluminum, steel, and petrochemical industries. He contends that informal producer cartels enjoy considerable legitimacy among and cooperation from downstream users, such as the automotive and electronics industries. Manufacturers accept the high costs and informal import restrictions as a necessary part of the price for maintaining strong domestic suppliers. Restrained Trade provides an original, thorough, and careful basic anatomy of important Japanese market practices: post-sales pricing and price adjustment, industrywide price formulas, refusals to deal, market versus big-buyer prices, and preferences for products from Japanese-owned plants overseas.

Power and Market

Power and Market
Author: Murray Newton Rothbard
Publisher: Ludwig von Mises Institute
Total Pages: 331
Release:
Genre: Economic policy
ISBN: 161016363X

American Fair Trade

American Fair Trade
Author: Laura Phillips Sawyer
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages:
Release: 2017-12-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108546943

Rather than viewing the history of American capitalism as the unassailable ascent of large-scale corporations and free competition, American Fair Trade argues that trade associations of independent proprietors lobbied and litigated to reshape competition policy to their benefit. At the turn of the twentieth century, this widespread fair trade movement borrowed from progressive law and economics, demonstrating a persistent concern with market fairness - not only fair prices for consumers but also fair competition among businesses. Proponents of fair trade collaborated with regulators to create codes of fair competition and influenced the administrative state's public-private approach to market regulation. New Deal partnerships in planning borrowed from those efforts to manage competitive markets, yet ultimately discredited the fair trade model by mandating economy-wide trade rules that sharply reduced competition. Laura Phillips Sawyer analyzes how these efforts to reconcile the American tradition of a well-regulated society with the legacy of Gilded Age of laissez-faire capitalism produced the modern American regulatory state.