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> The only "reason" why temporary price dumping is bad, is if it is being done for the purpose of raising the price in the future.

> Amazon wins by having prices as low as possible, and beating everyone else at the cost cutting game.

Amazon wins by dumping, making it very unattractive and then keeping prices low/stabile but using its bargaining power and unchallenged distriubution network to negotiate lower prices than competitorsm, thus it does higher volume, pays less and controls distribution. This is not good for competition, because there is little keeping them in check.

So I think those ideas are "somewhat" at odds.

Price dumping is often embargoed (thou difficult to detect) because short term it is good for the consumer, but bad for the competition. The idea is that you gain control and then you can use that to either keep market share or to raise prices.

largely, dumping is unpredictable. It can backfire, thus great for the market, a competitor goes down and subsidizes many consumers with goods. Or it can buy repreive, in that short term they recover the losses but competitionb moves in, or they can get in at the beginning of a trend and prevent others from getting in.

China did this with solar panels for a while and effectively subsidized solar for the world. It is "good" for someone most of the time, it is usually unclear who.

In a scenario where the person dumping also owns most of the distribution of goods and the infrastructure running most applications, local delivery networks, and content distribution networks like streasming video, music and devices to consume biooks and other media, it isn't great. This goes for apple and amazon.




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