Woodruff wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:To bring up an example I have brought up before, look at dishwashers and refridgerators. At first, it was great.. and you saw improvements toward being frost-free, freezer additions, etc. Then suddenly everyone had one. Refridgerators, as far as appliance companies were concerned were lasting too long. They brought up new refridgerators with new "features".. colors, shelving styles, etc. Sometimes there were real innovations,but the basic technology was already established. Many of those old refridgerators, built to last are still around. The new ones? They have a lifespan of 5 years. Moreover, many don't even last long.. and you often have to pay as much or more for a service agreement (definitely if you need service and don't have an agreement). Did all this really give us better refridgerators? No. I would be just as happy with the ones my grandmother and mother had. I don't, however have that option. I did buy used ones down in Mississippi, but here they just are not available. And, repairing the old ones cost as much as getting a new one. Is that reasonable ..that the parts to repair a machine should cost as much as the machine itself? Not really.
We had this debate, but you conveniently forgot, so why go through it again?
I'll sum up the problems with your example:
1) You ignore the additional costs in producing longer lasting products, which defeat their own usefulness as the technology becomes obsolete, and replaceable parts become too expensive to continue producing.
2) You mistaken this unseen cost for some corporate conspiracy, which to you explains why all corporations have colluded in creating only supposedly short-lasting products.
Yet refrigerators, as an example, DO last far fewer years than they used to. This is readily observable. How do you explain that, other than it being intentional? And, from a profit-making perspective, it does make sense...you can't continue to make money on refrigerators if everyone has a refrigerator and they last for a long time. Market saturation.
So, it's intentional? All corporations in the refrigeration industry have colluded together to create equally depreciating refrigerators? No, it simply costs more to ensure that something breaks less often than others. That costs additional money to make, and since refrigerators are practically the same, the price competition matters for each income bracket of the entire target market.
For example, if company A sells fridges at $500, and the going price is $500 in the market for those of household income X. Company A can perhaps capture a premium price by offering more quality through building a longer lasting product, yet how much would this cost? Would they price themselves out of the market, while providing something of higher, intangible quality? Businesses behave along their incentives, and the products on the market fall apart for explainable reasons. Seriously, try getting into these commodity markets and make longer lasting products with a price that can't be justified compared to the competitors'--maybe it'll work, and maybe it won't, but so far, I've yet to see any company claiming their products last 30 years (for good reason).
Also, it's presumably cheaper for these companies to offer guarantees and warranties because those are cheaper conditions to satisfy instead of spending the additional resources in making sure
all fridges last X amount of years.
Once again, it makes sense for them to behave accordingly. There's nothing planned, there's no collusion; and besides,the quality and durability of these products vary, so the planned obsolescence argument is kind of full of rubbish, since it blankets all products as being a certain manner without really showing that is the case.
Woodruff wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:3) You also ignore that people value cheaper commodities which last an expected amount of time (however short that may), more so than they value more expensive, yet supposedly longer-lasting products.
Those who can only afford the cheaper commodities certainly do...I don't believe the majority do, however.
Perhaps, and perhaps not. It depends on how the information is transmitted, and whether people can demand a certain good of perceivably higher quality. My point in regards to player is that people choose products because of how they perceive that value. That value ranges from long-lasting quality substituted with either a 5-year guarantee, a warranty, or maybe they value the lower price, or maybe they value some silly crap a free microwave. The point is that people's decisions play a huge role in the marketplace, so for either of you two to assume that the businesses all collude to create planned obsolescence ignores the buying behavior of the people involved. Granted, marketing is involved and shapes that behavior; however, it is not a one-way 100% brainwashing method, and the marketing is conducted from companies which compete with one another and try to beat each other's products.
For y'all to be correct, please explain why all the businesses collude to produce products of similar quality (which all break on purpose), yet all the businesses still compete with one another, and offer products of varying quality and varying prices. That doesn't make sense. I mean, they're colluding! Why waste all that money if they're colluding?! (Seriously, that planned obsolescence argument only holds up when someone ignores how consumers and businesses behave).
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Capitalism works well when things are new, when there is easy innovation. It doesn't work once the status quo is achieved.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I'd like to ask what are you babbling about, but I fear that it would be pointless.
What she's talking about here is market saturation, I believe.
Hey, I sincerely appreciate the translation.
