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I am fully aware of outdoor equipment providers having tiered purchase agreements as I experience that myself. Tractor dealerships offering ancillary outdoor equipment sales is a very common practice as is tiered pricing policies. I thought I made it clear of my targeting question as it applies to tractors.It will be impossible to prove it to you directly as I would need to get the agreements from various manufacturers and different dealers. I know from word of mouth with various dealers and various manufacturers that this is a very common practice among equipment manufacturers.
To whit this is an excerpt from a North Dakota law pertaining to how manufacturers can interact with dealers.
"This subdivision does not diminish the manufacturer's, wholesaler's, or distributor's ability to provide volume discounts, bonuses, or special machine ordering programs commonly used in the industry."
The law specifically calls out the fact that such practices are common in the industry and not prohibited.
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North Dakota Century Code Title 51. Sales and Exchanges § 51-07-01.2 | FindLaw
North Dakota Title 51. Sales and Exchanges 51-07-01.2. Read the code on FindLawcodes.findlaw.com
You made a blanket statement contrary the truth of Mahindra tractor providers same pricing policy and wanted to know what you know specifically, of some other tractor corporates, purchase and sales procedures to have made the statement.
It appears that you do not know anything else as it applies to this specific arena so you could of just said that as rScotty did.
To "allow" bonus or incentive wholesale pricing does not mean a company "has" to do so.
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