Amazon's Trickle-Down Monopoly (2024)

In this report, Moira Weigel tells the story of a group of hidden intermediaries who have played key roles in making Amazon one of the most powerful corporations in the world, while remaining mostly invisible to customers: third-party (3P) sellers.

Critics of Amazon’s monopoly have often emphasized how the company eliminates competition. This report highlights how Amazon’s scale has also given rise to new kinds of small businesses — ones optimized for Amazon. Industry analysts estimate that, in 2021, there were more than 6 million unique sellers active on Amazon and that at least 2,000 new sellers opened accounts every day.* To these sellers, Amazon holds forth the possibility of a trickle-down monopoly. But to seize the opportunities of Amazon’s global expansion involves considerable vulnerability. To succeed, 3P sellers must behave like miniature Amazons — without access to the capital that Amazon commands, insight into much of the company’s data, or the ability to make claims when they suffer harm.

Weigel establishes a typology and chronology of Amazon sellers, and explores the ambivalent realities of building a “small business” under the conditions that Amazon has created and controls. She argues that Amazon’s dominance of online search and global logistics has not (only)hurt or helped small businesses so much as transformed them. Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews with sellers in North America, China, and Southeast Asia, Weigel reveals how Amazon’s platform has restructured the social relations that comprise the global retail industry and set new rules for conducting business.

Amazon’s Trickle-Down Monopoly shows that it is by eliciting and constraining the agency of small business owners — rather than simply eliminating them — that Amazon has gained its power over global retail. In the process, countless small businesses across the world have made themselves in Amazon’s image. Given the long-standing economic and ideological supports for small business in the United States and beyond, and the changes that Amazon continues to enact for 3P sellers, the question remains: just how much time, value, resources, subsidies, profits, and loyalty does this transformation allow Amazon to claim as their own?

*Kaziukėnas 2021

Suggested Citation: Weigel, Moira.Amazon’s Trickle-Down Monopoly: Third-Party Sellers and the Transformation of Small Business. New York: Data & Society Research Institute, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4317167.

Amazon's Trickle-Down Monopoly (2024)

FAQs

Why is Amazon accused of being a monopoly? ›

“Amazon is a monopolist that uses its power to hike prices on American shoppers and charge sky-high fees on hundreds of thousands of online sellers,” John Newman, deputy director of the FTC's Bureau of Competition, said in a press release.

How does Amazon act like a monopoly? ›

The Federal Trade Commission portrays Amazon as a monopoly by narrowing the relevant market to “online superstores.” That definition conveniently limits Amazon's competitors to Walmart and Target.

Is Amazon technically a monopoly? ›

Monopolies are illegal because they limit choices, price flexibility, and innovation, all of which are not good for consumers or the economy. In this case, Amazon's size and industry dominance are not inherently monopolistic. However, its alleged exploitative and damaging behaviors could be.

What is trickle down monopoly? ›

Amazon's Trickle-Down Monopoly shows that it is by eliciting and constraining the agency of small business owners — rather than simply eliminating them — that Amazon has gained its power over global retail. In the process, countless small businesses across the world have made themselves in Amazon's image.

How close is Amazon to a monopoly? ›

Think of your local public water utility, electric company or natural gas provider. Neither Amazon, Google nor Facebook are anywhere close to being monopolists by that definition.

How close is Amazon to becoming a monopoly? ›

Amazon isn't a monopoly. As any economics textbook will affirm, a monopoly is an enterprise that is the sole provider of a good or service. Amazon may be big and popular, but it doesn't come close to meeting that definition.

Who is Amazon's biggest competitor? ›

Walmart is the biggest adversary Amazon has in North America, with online sales of $559 billion in 2021. And while its focus might still lie on physical stores, Walmart keeps investing in technology, development, and marketing to make sure its online presence keeps growing.

Is Amazon a monopoly and or in violation of the act? ›

Amazon's operations clearly constitute a violation of federal antitrust law, and courts must interpret the FTC's lawsuit as a meritorious challenge of exclusionary conduct.

What 17 states are suing Amazon? ›

The states involved in the case are Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.

Why is the US suing Amazon? ›

The U.S. government files an antitrust lawsuit against Amazon In a monopoly lawsuit, the Federal Trade Commission and 17 states accuse Amazon of suffocating rivals and raising costs for both sellers and shoppers.

Is Google technically a monopoly? ›

Antitrust enforcers allege that Google illegally maintained a monopoly over search, where it controls nearly 90% of online queries, through those payments to smartphone makers, web browsers and wireless carriers.

What are the monopolies in the US today? ›

They are Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta (Facebook), Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. Five of these will be familiar as the largest platform monopolies. They had a supernormal run-up in the stock prices because they have supernormal profits. And they have supernormal profits because of their monopoly power.

Has Amazon gotten too big? ›

Unless Congress acts quickly, Amazon is going to continue growing unabated, and that's a serious problem for most Americans. It means a less competitive economy where fewer businesses have a shot at success, and it could result in higher prices for consumers when Amazon weeds out competition.

Has trickle-down economics ever worked? ›

As of 2023, studies have not shown that there is a demonstrable link between reducing tax burdens on the upper end and economic growth.

What is an example of a trickle down economy? ›

Example #1

The Bush government implemented the following trickle-down policies: Increase in per-child tax credit from $600 to $1000 to benefit 25 million eligible families. 19% reduction in federal income tax for a family of 4 members with a total income of $75000.

What is the main allegation against Amazon? ›

The FTC and the states allege Amazon has illegally built and maintained a monopoly that harms its customers and competitors. Amazon does this, in large part, the FTC says, by essentially punishing and strong-arming third-party sellers if they offer lower prices elsewhere or don't use Amazon's add-on services.

What is Amazon accused of? ›

U.S. regulators and 17 states are suing Amazon over allegations the e-commerce behemoth abuses its position in the marketplace to inflate prices on and off its platform, overcharge sellers and stifle competition.

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