Why so many companies can exert control over workers they don’t actually employ.
in 1966 recognized the inequality at the heart of many economic relationships and accepted that small proprietors were typically in no position to resist terms presented to them by large corporations. It wrote, “A man operating a gas station is bound to be overawed by the great corporation that is his supplier, his banker, and his landlord.
The court reasoned that these restrictions could promote the efficient distribution of goods. By restricting the distribution of goods, the manufacturer could prevent a discount retailer from selling its goods at cut prices and “free riding” off the product demonstration and other services provided by a higher-end rival. Aspointed out in a concurring opinion, the majority abandoned traditional antitrust protection of business autonomy with hardly any explanation.
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