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Caltech and NYU economists call for Apple ebooks trial verdict to be overturned

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Apple’s prospects of a successful appeal against the ruling in the ebooks trial may be improved by a brief filed by two economists from Caltech and NYU who suggest that the ruling was in error and call for it to be reversed.

Apple was found guilty of anti-competitive practices on two grounds. First, it asked publishers to switch from a wholesale pricing model – where publishers sold books in bulk and retailers set their own prices – to an agency model, where publishers set prices and retailers took a percentage cut. This, the court found, reduced price competition … 

Second, Apple sought agreement from publishers that it would never pay more for books than any of its competitors – the so-called Most Favored Nation clause. The court found that this had the effect of keeping prices higher than they would otherwise have been by preventing other retailers negotiating better deals.

Caltech’s Bradford Cornell and NYU’s Janusz Ordover have filed what’s known as an amicus curiae brief – literally ‘a friend of the court’ – an unsolicited legal opinion by someone uninvolved with the case but feels they have information or opinions relevant to that case.

In it, they argue that Most Favored Nation agreements can actually promote competition when there is an existing dominant player (in this case, Amazon), and that the effect of Apple’s entry into the ebook market was to reduce Amazon’s power and thus act in the interests of consumers.

The provisions of the agreements at issue — agency, ‘most-favored-nation’ (MFN) clauses, and price caps—can be instrumental in facilitating new entry, particularly into markets with an entrenched, dominant firm. In this case, the District Court disregarded economic evidence and reasoning that these provisions served Apple’s independent business interest in entering the e-book market, where Amazon was a near-monopolist. The District Court also ignored economic evidence and reasoning suggesting that Apple’s entry into e-book retailing, and not the MFNs, allowed the Publisher Defendants to persuade Amazon to switch from a wholesale to an agency business model.

The District Court also erred in equating price increases for some e-books with harm to competition. Apple’s entry into the e-book retail market dramatically increased competition by diminishing Amazon’s power as a retail monopolist (and its ability to pursue a “loss-leader” strategy that inefficiently priced e-books below their acquisition cost). That increased competition gave publishers more bargaining power, thereby bringing ebook pricing closer to competitive levels. These errors threaten to chill competition by discouraging the use of common vertical contracting techniques that are often essential to facilitating the expensive and risky investments needed for entry into highly concentrated markets. Our antitrust laws should encourage, not penalize, vertical contracting arrangements that facilitate entry and enhance competition.

Courts are not obliged to allow amicus curiae briefs to be admitted into evidence, so we’ll need to wait and see whether this argument is considered. The DOJ plans to file its own response to Apple’s appeal by May.

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Comments

  1. Books on the Google Play store were the same price.

  2. Paul Schram - 10 years ago

    I remember before iBooks was a thing, I had the kindle app in my iPod. New books were rarely more than $9.99. Try to find a new book that low in price now. I love Apple, but Come On!!!

    • thejuanald - 10 years ago

      Seriously, Amazon was great with ebook prices before the collusion between Apple and publishers. Be prepared to be attacked, though, because even if we like Apple we aren’t allowed to say anything negative or a few people here will attack and berate you.

      • Paul Schram - 10 years ago

        I hear ya. Thanks for the warning. :)

  3. Dennis Ko (@dko129) - 10 years ago

    We’re Caltech. Not CalTech. Get our spelling right.

  4. Kris Shumard - 10 years ago

    A little history and perspective here. In 2009, just as the ebook battle was starting, the hardcover of Sarah Palin’s book “Going Rogue” was coming to market. Wal-Mart decided they were going to use it as a loss leader and started promoting the book at $9.99 months before it was going to come out. Amazon fired back that they were going to sell it $8.99. Wal-Mart went to $8.97 and thousand of books were sold far below cost. This was the warning shot accross the bow of the ebook market. Publishers felt that this devalued a hard cover book, and knew that the public would expect this to be the new proce of all hardcovers. The ebook market at that point was new and so they decided to go to a model where they retained the right to set the prices. They decided to use the agency model in order to retain some control of pricing. This seemed like a good solution and so the other publishers adopted this method. As this is very similar to the model that Apple uses in selling apps through the App store, and iTunes they signed on to this system.

    Amazon took offense, goaded the Justice Department into filing a lawsuit and got most of the big publishers to settle rather than fight a long and protracted battle in federal court within the possible consequences of being having to pay damages on every ebook they sold in the interim, if they lost. I would think there might be just as valid as a case to be made that Amazon engages in predatory pricing that could make just as effective a case for the Justice Department to pursue. Just look at the example above. This was clearly a case to convince Wal-Mart to stay out of the book business.

    I think the fact that two economists with no skin in the game both were willing to sign on to this brief and recognize that Amazon is a “retail monopolist”, lend credence to the fact that they may have a point.

    • Ben Lovejoy - 10 years ago

      Yes, effectively the argument is that Apple’s entry into what was a near-monopoly had a positive impact for consumers, and that it needs to be viewed in that light, rather than a more theoretical one.

Author

Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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