Captive supply

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Captive_supply

Captive supply is a term for that part of the supply that is not owned by a company but is used by the company to maximize its own profits often at the unknowing expense of those who actually own those supplies. This is usually a characteristic of a market that is dominated by one firm or a few firms and implicit collusion between those firms. Often captive supply is called a beneficial market agreement by those controlling the supply but the actions of those controlling that supply reveal otherwise. Captive supply is used to subvert the natural forces of market price determination to accrue more economic benefits to those who control it. It circumvents the typically price-moderating of supply and demand by artificially restricting the supply. Example: American Bar Association Over Legal rdf:langString
rdf:langString Captive supply
xsd:integer 1375375
xsd:integer 889646385
rdf:langString Captive supply is a term for that part of the supply that is not owned by a company but is used by the company to maximize its own profits often at the unknowing expense of those who actually own those supplies. This is usually a characteristic of a market that is dominated by one firm or a few firms and implicit collusion between those firms. Often captive supply is called a beneficial market agreement by those controlling the supply but the actions of those controlling that supply reveal otherwise. Captive supply is used to subvert the natural forces of market price determination to accrue more economic benefits to those who control it. It circumvents the typically price-moderating of supply and demand by artificially restricting the supply. Example: American Bar Association Over Legal Industry. * v * t * e
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 949

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