this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2024
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[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

How? That can go both ways, I can make some thing for €5000, but if nobody is willing to buy it, it's still worthless

[–] [email protected] -3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

There's a cost to producing things. All the overhead you're being charged that ends up enriching investors and bosses that have so much money they wouldn't be able to spend it if they tried? That's money you could keep in your pocket.

Have you ever thought that maybe you evaluate that some things are worth a certain amount just because that's what you're used to seeing them sold for so in reality you just underestimate what your money is worth and how much you should be able to purchase with it? Because that's exactly what's happening, especially with digital goods, there's no supply vs demand relationship here, there's no rarity.

If bread sells for 5$ for long enough you'll think you're getting your money's worth by getting it on sale for 4.50$ without realizing that it cost 2$ to make it, transport it and put it on the shelves and there's still 2.50$ going to the grocery store owner. You were paying that bread 3$ a couple of years ago and at the time it cost 1.75$ to make, transport and store, but you're ignoring all that because what's important is that right now it's 50¢ less than full price so you're getting your money's worth. Most of the surplus is going to a company that's just making record profit year after year after year, but that record profit comes from somewhere. It went up 100% in a couple of years while the people who made, transported and put the bread on the shelves have seen their salary increase by 10% and you've seen what you spend on grocery increase by 66%, but hey, you're getting your money's worth and the price is fair because that's what people accept to be paying, right?