{"title":"The Fiction of Locally Owned Mom and Pop Car Dealers: Some Data on Franchised Automobile Distribution in the State of Michigan","authors":"D. Crane","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.3000497","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The State of Michigan is currently defending a constitutional challenge to its automobile direct distribution prohibition. The lawsuit was brought by the automotive manufacturer Tesla, which has been denied a license to open show rooms or service centers in the state. A 2014 amendment to Michigan’s vehicle franchise statute tightened the statute’s direct distribution prohibition to make clear that even a manufacturer like Tesla that did not franchise dealers at all is prohibited from opening its own showrooms or service centers and dealing directly with consumers in the state. That law has been widely criticized by economists, consumer protection organizations like the Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Federation of America, environmental groups like the Sierra Club, and free market organizations like the Institute for Justice. \nIn the Michigan litigation, the State is expected to rely on the assertion, frequently made by the dealers’ lobbyists, that maintaining a locally owned dealership system is beneficial to the State. Such assertions are grounded in the trope of the atomistic “mom and pop” dealer of American economic folklore — the family-owned, locally rooted dealership. This justification is increasingly a fiction. While some such dealerships may still exist, Michigan law does not require dealerships to be locally owned and operated or independent from other economic enterprises. Many are not.","PeriodicalId":231496,"journal":{"name":"LSN: Law & Economics: Public Law (Topic)","volume":"117 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-07-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"LSN: Law & Economics: Public Law (Topic)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/SSRN.3000497","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The State of Michigan is currently defending a constitutional challenge to its automobile direct distribution prohibition. The lawsuit was brought by the automotive manufacturer Tesla, which has been denied a license to open show rooms or service centers in the state. A 2014 amendment to Michigan’s vehicle franchise statute tightened the statute’s direct distribution prohibition to make clear that even a manufacturer like Tesla that did not franchise dealers at all is prohibited from opening its own showrooms or service centers and dealing directly with consumers in the state. That law has been widely criticized by economists, consumer protection organizations like the Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Federation of America, environmental groups like the Sierra Club, and free market organizations like the Institute for Justice.
In the Michigan litigation, the State is expected to rely on the assertion, frequently made by the dealers’ lobbyists, that maintaining a locally owned dealership system is beneficial to the State. Such assertions are grounded in the trope of the atomistic “mom and pop” dealer of American economic folklore — the family-owned, locally rooted dealership. This justification is increasingly a fiction. While some such dealerships may still exist, Michigan law does not require dealerships to be locally owned and operated or independent from other economic enterprises. Many are not.
密歇根州目前正在为其禁止汽车直接分销的宪法挑战进行辩护。这起诉讼是由汽车制造商特斯拉提起的,该公司在该州开设展厅或服务中心的许可证被拒绝。2014年对密歇根州汽车特许经营法规的一项修正案收紧了该法规对直接分销的禁令,明确规定,即使是像特斯拉这样根本没有特许经销商的制造商,也被禁止在该州开设自己的展厅或服务中心,并直接与消费者打交道。这项法律受到了经济学家、联邦贸易委员会(Federal Trade Commission)和美国消费者联合会(consumer Federation of America)等消费者保护组织、塞拉俱乐部(Sierra Club)等环保组织以及正义研究所(Institute for Justice)等自由市场组织的广泛批评。在密歇根州的诉讼中,预计该州将依赖于经销商游说者经常提出的主张,即维持当地拥有的经销商系统对该州有利。这种说法是基于美国经济民间传说中原子式的“夫妻店”经销商的比喻——家族所有的、扎根于当地的经销商。这种辩解越来越像是虚构的。虽然一些这样的经销商可能仍然存在,但密歇根州的法律并不要求经销商必须在当地拥有和经营,也不要求经销商独立于其他经济企业。很多都不是。