justin_o_guy2 wrote on 11/11/16 at 18:31:57:You didn't SAY
The Marketing department of the corporation.
Screw it. Communicate complete thoughts.
Marketing
To most people
Is
Advertising campaigns.
You're wrong as CRAP and I don't see how explaining another thing to you will be worth the effort.
Read what I said.
Listen to the interviews,
C o me back, I'll try to educate you.
Go back and use MY EXAMPLES.
You made a statement, I demonstrated where it fails.
Deal with it.
Ohhh, wait, change the subject,,
Handle it or concede.
it's not my fault you can't follow a conversation. I replied to Paraquat, who was talking about prices. and prices, almost ALL prices are fictional constructions by marketing forces, not just a department, of some kind.
I made a statement, you cherry picked your examples to try to demonstrate where it failed, I came back cherry picking even MORE examples proving my statement. and notice, I never said you were wrong, I said you were only understanding the complexities of this at an entry level understanding. yes, production does effect price, but it's really become almost a secondary concern for price. if you just want to go that far, fine, but don't try to "educate" me about sh!t after that.
my Diamond example is a direct response to your "over produce a product and the price goes down" diamonds are highly over produced and they are one of the most expensive products out there. Proving that poduction doesn't necessarily effect price the way you'd think it does.
now your example, OIL, is ONE of ONLY A FEW products, where the supply and demand curve and production cost really do, more or less, dictate price, but that's really only true with inelastic products, where the demand is really NOT affected by price, BUT, even then, there's marketing, Shell gas is more than Valero gas, and Exxon is more than Kroger gas and Chevron gas is more than Walmart/Murphy's gas, so even THERE, there's some marketing cost factored in, the brand names of gas market that they have more cleaners or whatever else in their gas which allows them to JUSTIFY a price increase over generic gas. And limiting me to YOUR examples, you know, the ones YOU CHERRY picked to prove you point, the exceptions that make the rule, yeah, that's how you want it huh? stuck in your limited reality.
oh, and I'm not just talking about individual marketing departments, marketing in general affects prices overall, Samsung didn't have to have their marketing department set the price of their phones, if they want to compete with Apple, Apple set the price, then Samsung copies it so they can be perceived as an equal product.
and you're one to talk about "Communicate complete thoughts" some of the time you're too busy mocking something in that "uneducated" spelling crap you use that I can barely decipher what the heck the words you are typing are supposed to be.
and YOU KNOW I'M RIGHT. it's not my fault you don't know what Marketing is, and the advertising is only a SMALL part of marketing.
to give you another chance, look up elastic and inelastic products