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Guest
So by your reasoning the only thing that should be important is price? Who cares about quality of instruction ... whoever is cheapest should survive!!! I will repeat - if you make your sale on price then you will loose it on price too. If you don't have to ability to be creative enough to move the price away from a price only discussion then you have no business being in sales. Anybody can make a sale on price alone.
It would be communism if the government (or other central planning organization) dictated that you must carry SP, and that you must abide by their MARP & MAP policies. And then it was further decreed that each diver had to purchase SP.
By resticiting how a company implements its business plan you are a lot closer to communism then by allowing them to design and implement a plan that suits their needs and wants.
I don't think anyone but you is saying price only. For me, price is the starting point and I'll work from there. But I do have to admit, price is a pretty big factor and there is just not much that will make me pay $600 from one retailer for a regulator that I can get for $300 to $400 from another retailer. But I don't put much value in a manufacturer's warranty and I do my own servicing.
We (USA) and most other countries already put restrictions on things business can do. In the USA, it's probably that "of the people, by the people, for the people" thing.
We already control monopolies and price fixing. MARP is just a poorly disguised maneuver around what would otherwise be illegal price fixing. I don't find MAP quite as distasteful but it is just another maneuver to limit free market competition. As a consumer, I would like to see it end but I do understand why small scuba shops think they need it. It's like when there is a food shortage so we either have to ration the supplies or thin the herd. In the case of retail scuba, I just think that allowing natural selection (competition) to thin the herd would be a better long-term solution to all these struggling dive shops.