aelreth said:
Dexter S. Bateman said:
So all the economical arguments that are basically pro-business and anti-consumer because 'if the consumer is that unhappy they shouldn't buy it' should really kindly STFU. A completely unregulated market is not efficient or fair in most cases, and sirs and ma'ams, this is one of them.
It's not an unregulated market, there is a minimum wage twice as high as the United States. Thus this creates a floor for the labor in all the brick and mortar retail stores. Could you give me the price for these products in the retail store?
Since Adobe is dropping it's prices because the AUD has risen in value, conversely shouldn't the Australian government lower it's minimum wage?
Labor isn't an unregulated market, games selling is. One is an operating cost of the company, the other is to do with people buying games - two fairly separate things. Also, the higher Australian dollar doesn't reduce our prices for anything at all - CPI still increases, so lowering the minimum wage would be pure folly.
And why the hell is the minimum wage even relevant? It's been said again and again that digital distribution sales are still ludicrously high, regardless of brick and mortar stores.
You didn't even respond to my argument, just fell straight back to the "BUSINESS IS ALMIGHTY AND UNFLAWED" logic that I alluded to in my first post. Businesses rip people off, in this case, I am saying that they are not producing economically efficient levels of output - they are producing less than a more perfectly competitive market would for a higher price as that maximises their profits (as I said before, by reducing the benefit consumers receive in a perfectly competitive market).
So long as we have our 'two-speed economy' with the mining boom (and living in Central Queensland I can certainly feel it), luxuries are always going to be unfairly priced for the majority so long as businesses can make the same out of money out of the rich few (probably considerably more than 1%, but still).