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- Title
THE APPLE E-BOOKS CASE: WHEN IS A VERTICAL CONTRACT A HUB IN A HUB-AND-SPOKE CONSPIRACY?
- Authors
Klein, Benjamin
- Abstract
Apple's economic role in the Publisher conspiracy to increase Amazon's below cost pricing of e-books is examined in a hub-and-spoke conspiracy framework. The five major e-book publisher defendants ("the Publishers") conspired because of their concern that Amazon's low prices would adversely affect physical book demand and prices and also create an Amazon retail monopoly under which Amazon would negotiate substantially lower wholesale e-book prices. The Publisher conspiracy successfully moved Amazon to an agency relationship and gained control over e-book retail pricing. The Publishers accomplished this by jointly threatening Amazon with windowing (delaying the release of new ebook titles), which imposed a significant potential cost on Amazon in the face of Apple's scheduled entry without windowing. Apple therefore economically facilitated the Publisher conspiracy solely through its entry, not through any of its iBookstore contract terms. Contrary to the court, the most favored nation (MFN) and maximum price terms in the Apple contracts had no effect in facilitating the Publisher conspiracy. In fact, if Apple had entered without these contract terms, e-book prices would have been substantially higher. Consequently, Apple's contracts should not have been evaluated under a per se standard.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC books; APPLE Inc.; CONSPIRACY; AMAZON.COM Inc.; MOST favored nation clause; INTERSTATE Circuit Inc.; ACTIONS &; defenses (Law); BOOK sales &; prices
- Publication
Journal of Competition Law & Economics, 2017, Vol 13, Issue 3, p423
- ISSN
1744-6414
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/joclec/nhx021