If you want your out-of-state customers to be most confident that they are 
getting your lowest price so their shopping is easiest, you should call it 
a Minimum Resale Price (MRP). That’s because the law calls the lowest price 
that most often so using any other name makes you less responsible. It was 
originally used by manufacturers to control the prices of their resellers 
but any offer can have an MRP. The U.S. Supreme Court re-calls it as that 
in the Leegin vs. PSKS case using that term more than any other. The case 
opinion describes historic doubts about vertical price-fixing and more 
“innovative” methods of commerce that now make it possible, referring to 
the internet where profits can be lower and more competitive.

Your MRP policy, if you choose to make one, can have any specifications 
you’d like. These can allow for lower prices outside of your offer or can 
describe any other specifics or limitations that you choose to include. 
This might be because you have a special price for employees or are having 
a sale on a limited amount of your offering. On the other hand, an MRP can 
be strongly enforced, as well. 

Many sellers already sell at only or mostly one price. With all of the 
discounting going on these days, the MRP gives them a chance to prove that 
they’re easier for customers to buy from. Other businesses have price 
guarantees but by using the MRP you are most likely to have the law 
guarantee your price. Even if a manufacturer or a seller offers money to 
those that find a lower price elsewhere, if the contract makers do not call 
the price an MRP, it is easier for them to back out of the contract. Any 
brick and mortar business could have an MRP sticker that means that they've 
signed the strongest guarantee that their prices are final. It would keep 
customers from overpaying since one customer might get a lower bargained 
down price than another.

There’s an issue is with similar deals outside of yours but it’s workable. 
If a person finds an offering like the one that you have at a better price 
they cannot be sure of the bottom price for that offering and, therefore, 
its value. They’ll regret not buying at the lowest price. All offers have 
their similarities and their differences as well. You decide which offers 
to put MRPs on and how different they are from your other deals as well as 
how strongly you guarantee them (possibly backing them with cash).

The difference between horizontal and vertical price-fixing is important to 
note here. Horizontal price-fixing is the collusion of competing sellers in 
determining a price without the participation of the manufacturer or 
creator of the good or service. It is still illegal in the United States 
and around the world. Vertical price-fixing is the dictation of a final 
sale price by the manufacturer or creator of a product or service. 
(Wikipedia.org) Because of the Supreme Court’s opinion, MRP agreements are 
now judged on a rule of reason basis in The U.S., Canada, China, and 
Israel. To you, that means that as long as you don’t have a mark-up that is 
too high, you are not violating any anti-trust laws. Commerce within this 
realm must also usually be between separate states or countries.

 

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