Evaluating the Role of Intermediaries in a Local Market
Consider a historical local fish market where fishermen sold their catch exclusively to a group of intermediary merchants who then sold the fish to the public. These merchants possessed significant negotiating power. Based on this market structure, construct an argument evaluating the economic impact of these merchants. In your response, justify whether their role was primarily beneficial or detrimental to the overall health and efficiency of the market, considering the outcomes for both the fishermen and the final consumers.
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In the context of Kerala's fish market before 1997, which statement best analyzes the direct economic consequence of the strong negotiating position held by intermediary merchants?
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Evaluating the Role of Intermediaries in a Local Market
In the Kerala fish market before 1997, the low profits earned by fishermen were a direct result of the low prices consumers were paying for fish.
In the described scenario of a local fish market before 1997, an inefficiency existed where producers earned little while end-buyers paid high prices. Match each market participant with the description that best reflects their economic position within this structure.
In the Kerala fish market before 1997, the strong negotiating position of merchants who bought directly from fishermen and sold to the public meant they functioned as powerful ____, which allowed them to suppress the prices paid to the fishermen.
Arrange the following statements into a logical cause-and-effect sequence that explains how intermediaries in a market can gain significant negotiating power over producers, leading to lower profits for the producers.
In a market for perishable goods, a small number of intermediary merchants buy from many individual producers and then sell to a large number of consumers. This structure gives the merchants significant negotiating power, often resulting in low profits for the producers. Which of the following scenarios would most effectively shift bargaining power back to the producers?
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