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Amazon hit with antitrust suit in US capital city

Amazon was hit Tuesday with an antitrust suit from the US capital city Washington, claiming the tech giant abuses its dominant position in online retail sales, harming consumers.

The suit filed by the office of Attorney General Karl Racine alleges that Amazon's control of 50 to 70 percent of US e-commerce sales results in higher consumer prices.

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"Amazon's online retail sales platform benefits from, and is protected by, Amazon's anticompetitive business practices," said the suit filed in District of Columbia superior court. 

"Far from enabling consumers to obtain the best products at the lowest prices, Amazon instead causes prices across the entire online retail sales market to be artificially inflated, both for products sold on Amazon's online retail sales platform and on its competitors' online retail sales platforms."

Amazon, which has long claimed it delivers lower prices for consumers, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Big Tech scrutiny

The lawsuit comes amid heightened scrutiny of large tech platforms which have increased their dominance during the pandemic.

US state and federal antitrust enforcers last year filed suits targeting Facebook and Google alleging illegal dominance of their respective markets.

Racine's lawsuit seeks to stop Amazon from "anticompetitive" practices and calls for damages and other penalties.

According to the research firm eMarketer, Amazon's share of US e-commerce was 39.8 percent in 2020 and was expected to increase to 44.1 percent this year, representing $367.19 billion, with growth larger than that of any other company.

According to the lawsuit, Amazon uses practices that prevent third-party sellers on its platform from offering their products at lower prices on rival websites.

Until 2019, Amazon required sellers to sign a "price parity" agreement that prevented them from selling at lower prices, which "artificially raised the price of goods to consumers across the online retail sales market."

The complaint said Amazon ended this practice in 2019 under pressure from Congress and regulations but implemented "an effectively-identical substitute," which allows Amazon to impose sanctions on sellers which offer lower prices elsewhere.

Amazon in the first three months of the year reported a profit of $8.1 billion, triple the amount from a year earlier, amid soaring sales during the pandemic.

The company founded by Jeff Bezos, one of the world's richest people, has grown from modest beginnings as an online bookseller to a behemoth in e-commerce, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, streaming media, groceries and more.

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