I'll just ignore the fact that it gets easier to produce those products and sate demand.
Perceived value of Apple computers. You're still buying Macs at their prices.😕
Based on that concept - you would think Apple Computers would "get easier" to make and hence we wouldnt have the same price throughout the product cycle!
I would like to see a price drop on Apple Computers that are over a year old and never updated - case in point, the Mac Mini - Dare I say that is NOT indeed "easier to produce today"?
Perceived value of Apple computers. You're still buying Macs at their prices.
I don't remember saying that hard drives had a low value. Did you buy 1 TB hard drives at launch?Value must be REALLY low for Hard Drives right now! 😀
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=8490625&type=product&id=1186003683968
I don't remember saying that hard drives had a low value. Did you buy 1 TB hard drives at launch?
This just in: The pricing of goods is determined by several factors, mainly supply and demand. Producers of goods will price something where they feel they will maximize profits based on demand for said goods. If the market feels the price is too high, demand will drop causing the seller of said goods to lower the price and the cost, if they want to maintain profit margins.🙄
Except when it comes to gas 🙄
Not to de-rail this thread too much, but the price of gas is generally priced the exact way I describe. Gas has a relatively inelastic demand curve. Knowing this, the oil companies price gas as high as they possible can to maximize profits now without negatively affecting demand. The make obscene profits now because you are paying for the uncertainty in the price of oil going forward. Basically, they taking their money now, because they have to keep paying more and more for gas and they don't know if or when they will be able to reduce costs.
But demand is increasing rapidly; it will not drop, no way. Is it 10m new cars on the roads in China alone, per year? And as you said, the demand curves are highly inelastic- oil is practically a dependence good.
Too much money chasing too few goods -> Price inflation.
Signs of a weak economy where demand for Computer Products must be very low (Memory, Hard Drives, etc..) becuase I see Hard Drive prices dropping by the day. In less than a week $75.00 price drop. Memory is simply stupid cheap. Owning a Mac Pro has never been more affordable.
Less Demand = Cheaper Prices. 😀
Signs of a weak economy where demand for Computer Products must be very low (Memory, Hard Drives, etc..) becuase I see Hard Drive prices dropping by the day. In less than a week $75.00 price drop. Memory is simply stupid cheap. Owning a Mac Pro has never been more affordable.
Less Demand = Cheaper Prices. 😀
Prices for computer goods always drops when existing tech makes things easier to produce in large quantities. Apple computers don't drop prices because they are not a basic computer good, they are a specialized product that isn't subject to all the normal rules that accompany supply and demand.
Yes on the first part. No on the second.
Apple computers are definitely subject to the rules of supply and demand; there is just a different perceived value in the market for Apple computers (and iPods for that matter). People are willing to pay more for Apple computers because they perceive to be getting a better value for an Apple than a Dell. Period. I generally hate the car analogy, but here it is appropriate. People pay more for a BWM than a Hyundai because they perceive that they get better value from the BWM. Same thing. If the perceived utility of an Apple and a Dell were exactly the same, then they would be priced the same. For RAM and HDDs, the perceived utility is generally the same no matter who the manufacturer is, which is why they are all priced about the same.
If the perceived utility of an Apple and a Dell were exactly the same, then they would be priced the same. For RAM and HDDs, the perceived utility is generally the same no matter who the manufacturer is, which is why they are all priced about the same.
You're correct here. I really should have taken a business class.
The OP is still wrong.
...we wouldnt have the same price throughout the product cycle!
What's that you say? The US is teetering on the edge of/is in a RECESSION? What rock have you been hiding under?
We all knew this.
Prices for computer goods always drops when existing tech makes things easier to produce in large quantities. Apple computers don't drop prices because they are not a basic computer good, they are a specialized product that isn't subject to all the normal rules that accompany supply and demand.
By the way, I just got my Mac Pro a week ago. Normally Apple Retail Store Employees are HO-HUM about a customer walking in. For the most part, they left you alone and could care less if you bought anything in the store. Basically, the products sold themselves and if you had a 30 min conversation with a Retail Employee and decided to leave - you never really felt like you had to buy something or was being pressured into any purchase.
Fast foward to last week and WOW - what a difference!
I was attacked (not literally) like someone looking for a car and a sleezy used car lot. Everyone was on top of you and would do ANYTHING for a sale.
I dare not mention what those tactics were because I dont want to put it in writting on the Internet - let me just tell you that I got discounts I would of had NEVER been offered (on the down low) by complete strangers in hopes of securing a sale.
The discounts were so appealing that I purchased my first Mac Pro with a 30" Apple Cinema Display saving over $600.00
I would venture to say that "demand" is MUCH lower these days.
Thats my only point - most certainly does not appear to be - lower manufacturing costs! 🙂
Apple has NEVER done that. Why would a recession change their minds; people still buy Macs like wildfire.
People buy wildfire? 😱
On a side note...ok never mind.