Buy European
Overview:
The community to discuss buying European goods and services.
Rules:
-
Be kind to each other, and argue in good faith. No direct insults nor disrespectful and condescending comments.
-
Do not use this community to promote Nationalism/Euronationalism. This community is for discussing European products/services and news related to that. For other topics the following might be of interest:
-
Include a disclaimer at the bottom of the post if you're affiliated with the recommendation.
Feddit.uk's instance rules apply:
- No racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia or xenophobia
- No incitement of violence or promotion of violent ideologies
- No harassment, dogpiling or doxxing of other users
- Do not share intentionally false or misleading information
- Do not spam or abuse network features.
- Alt accounts are permitted, but all accounts must list each other in their bios.
Benefits of Buying Local:
local investment, job creation, innovation, increased competition, more redundancy.
Related Communities:
Buy Local:
Buying and Selling:
[email protected]
Boycott:
[email protected]
Stop Publisher Kill Switch in Games Practice:
[email protected]
Banner credits: BYTEAlliance
view the rest of the comments
I get your thinking. Well, there are plenty of online stores that have products from many different brands. And there are plenty of warehouses as a service that do the logistics for multiple companies in one facility. But they are sent separately because it is by separate orders for different companies. It would make sense to send them together as one, right?
However I think it would be difficult to run a warehouse sharing business like this without running into red tape of market competition because it would favour those companies using that particular warehouse service and small companies not using their warehouse service would be at disadvantage. But if they manage to work around it, sooner or later that warehouse business would want to make a bigger cut themselves and start selling the product they see most profitable as they have all the data and all the logistics and eventually no longer need the other businesses as the risk takers. And there we are with another Amazon with all the nasty business practices. I think it would be inevitable in this era and economy.
Probably true. If we had a more left leaning economic system, it could be the job of the government to regulate these things. To uptain a healthy competition, that companies aren't expanding more and more and if they do, to split them up into smaller parts.