Quote:
Originally Posted by MattW
Here in Austria (and in Germany, Greece, Italy, Holland and France as well; and various other European countries), we have what is called "Buchpreisbindung" in German, which means that no one, not Amazon, not bookstores, no one is allowed to sell a book for anything other than the list price set by the publisher. This system has been in place since 1888 in Germany, for example.
Which doesn't automatically make it right, but at least shows that there is a valid argument that can be made along the lines of what Turow is saying -- the market isn't everything and even in the 19th century people realised that books are something that benefits from special proctection.
Whether or not such laws make sense in today's world of big publishers and the internet is open for debate, of course. All I am trying to say is that it's not as clear-cut as it may look. And while I am not a fan of big publishing, I personally don't trust that Apple & Amazon have only the good of the consumer in mind. They both don't sell books out of love for the medium.
Matt
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Yes, and with the "Buchpreisbindung" you pay a lot more than you should. If European consumers are generally happy with that, I don't know. I would like to buy some German books, occasionally. But every time I see the prices I think "forget it, I will read the English translation or I won't buy the book at all". So I only buy German books to use up some old gift coupons someone gave me.
So the real question is, should book buyers be squeezed to keep small bookstores alive?