This book highlights the hurdles that beset the control of quality and
prices of goods in the local markets in Cameroon. The proliferation of
goods in the formal and informal sectors of the Cameroonian economy
still stands as a challenge over the quality of goods and the pricing
policy. This book is justified in addressing the pertinent problems of
commercial and consumer buyers' dissatisfaction over the poor quality of
goods and discriminatory prices in the market. This study is therefore
written at a time when there is a current incessant outcry from buyers
of goods as a result of bad business malpractices committed by
unscrupulous sellers in the Cameroonian market. Though much emphasis has
been laid on the commercial buyer as governed principally by the OHADA
Law, the primary objective is to measure business practices in theory
and in real commercial life. Using an in-depth analysis of primary and
secondary data, the authors strongly advocate for the fact that the
seller is bound to take responsibility(caveat venditor) for poor quality
and the discriminatory prices of goods that are not in conformity with
contractual stipulations and the statutory laws in force.